[00:04] *** SpeedBus has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 248 seconds) [00:54] *** rgouveia has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 240 seconds) [00:56] *** rgouveia has joined #arpnetworks [00:56] *** rgouveia has quit IRC (Changing host) [00:56] *** rgouveia has joined #arpnetworks [01:34] *** first2know has quit IRC (Remote host closed the connection) [02:11] *** SpeedBus has joined #arpnetworks [02:34] *** first2know has joined #arpnetworks [03:18] *** SpeedBus has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 256 seconds) [05:37] *** SpeedBus_ has joined #arpnetworks [05:41] *** SpeedBus_ is now known as SpeedBus [06:24] *** first2know has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 256 seconds) [06:38] *** first2know has joined #arpnetworks [06:43] gizmoguy: http://theforeman.org/ <== bookmarked [06:43] thx [06:54] *** first2know has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 264 seconds) [07:07] we had the foreman on floss weekly a few months ago [07:08] ... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UbHMWT8lQYI [07:10] *** first2know has joined #arpnetworks [07:12] *** heavysixer has joined #arpnetworks [07:12] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer [07:13] !ping up_the_irons [07:14] email support@ :) [07:14] and I'm fairly sure he's sleeping right now. I know I would be. [07:14] hi RandalSchwartz [07:14] How are you today? [07:14] Almost awake [07:14] in theory, up since 5 [07:14] I feel that way too, but it's 4pm here. [07:15] but in practice, my body is lagging today [07:15] Ask me now. [07:15] I need to go fetch some tea with coconut oil... then I'll be better. :) [07:19] there we go. tea with a tablespoon of coconut oil. that'll get me going. [07:19] medium chain fatty acids go right to the cells, no need for the liver to chop it up into a different length [07:21] anisfarhana "Ask me now"? Ask what. [07:21] Ask my condition. [07:22] Well.. you're free to answer without being asked. This *is* a chat room. :) [07:22] That is not fun :( [07:22] I feel like just talking to myself. [07:22] I say a lot of stuff here (and everywhere) without being prompted. :) [07:22] You are difference. [07:23] Yes - that I am [07:24] I think i should get away from my laptop. [07:24] and focus on something else. [07:25] RandalSchwartz: You love to watch movie? [07:26] *** first2know has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 264 seconds) [07:32] *** first2know has joined #arpnetworks [07:37] *** heavysixer_ has joined #arpnetworks [07:37] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer_ [07:39] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 260 seconds) [07:39] *** heavysixer_ is now known as heavysixer [07:42] *** first2know has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 264 seconds) [07:53] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 240 seconds) [07:55] *** heavysixer has joined #arpnetworks [07:55] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer [08:07] *** first2know has joined #arpnetworks [08:11] *** first2know has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 245 seconds) [08:12] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 260 seconds) [08:17] *** heavysixer has joined #arpnetworks [08:17] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer [08:24] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 246 seconds) [08:24] *** first2know has joined #arpnetworks [08:33] *** heavysixer has joined #arpnetworks [08:33] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer [08:40] *** heavysixer_ has joined #arpnetworks [08:40] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer_ [08:42] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 256 seconds) [08:42] *** heavysixer_ is now known as heavysixer [08:45] *** heavysixer_ has joined #arpnetworks [08:45] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer_ [08:47] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 256 seconds) [08:47] *** heavysixer_ is now known as heavysixer [08:52] *** heavysixer_ has joined #arpnetworks [08:52] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer_ [08:54] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 260 seconds) [08:54] *** heavysixer_ is now known as heavysixer [08:57] *** heavysixer_ has joined #arpnetworks [08:57] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer_ [08:59] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 264 seconds) [08:59] *** heavysixer_ is now known as heavysixer [08:59] heavysixer needs a better net connection :) [09:00] RandalSchwartz: dood don't i know it…. sorry for the IRC spam [09:00] RandalSchwartz: i'll leave until I can get this resolved. [09:00] hi everypony [09:00] *** heavysixer has left [09:03] *** heavysixer_ has joined #arpnetworks [09:03] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer_ [09:03] aww heavysixer didn't have to leave :( [09:03] wb heavysixer_ [09:03] i just suppress join/parts [09:03] /ignore -channels #arpnetworks heavysixer JOINS QUITS [09:03] so i didn't see anything but the +o [09:03] hahaha [09:04] My irc client can't do that. :( [09:04] RandalSchwartz: WHY NOT? [09:04] unless I write some more emacs lisp code [09:04] oh god no [09:04] yes, I am typing this in an emacs buffer [09:04] inside a tmux session [09:04] http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/ErcIgnoring [09:04] inside a Terminal.app [09:05] not using erc.. never got used to it [09:05] see, i just screen irssi [09:05] and...that's it [09:05] I use irc.el, which I contributed to, back in the day [09:05] tmux >> screen [09:05] what is 'back in the day' [09:05] oh geez, you mean there are more than one way to IRC from emacs? *sigh* [09:05] *** heavysixer_ is now known as heavysixer [09:05] yeah, there's about four [09:05] i just pretend emacs doesn't exist [09:05] tada http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/irc.el [09:05] m0unds++ [09:06] Except for all these shortcuts I learned that are apparently based in emacs [09:06] brycec: ha it just reconnects me when i drop off [09:06] no - that's tale's client, not rocker's client [09:06] there were two things called irc.el [09:06] i gotta say [09:06] Oh FFS! This is one more reason to not emacs. [09:06] my brain has problems parsing that kind of syntax [09:06] <_elf> real men connect to IRC with netcat [09:07] real men connect to irc/tls with netcat [09:07] Oh wait... it *is* tale's client, modified by rocker [09:07] and do the primes in their head [09:07] so it was a fork [09:07] <_elf> haha [09:07] lol hazardous [09:07] so yes, that they are both named irc.el makes sense :) [09:08] what language is that in anyways [09:08] I'm comfortable with my level of manliness, and that's backed by having written a few IRC bots that "netcat" to the server (sockets, IRC message parsing, etc. I know my IRC pretty well.) [09:08] hazardous: you're looking at lisp [09:08] .el files are in emacs lisp [09:08] specifically that dialect ^ [09:08] at one point I was very fluent in it [09:08] does that make it emacth? [09:08] as far as i can tell ; is a comment(?) [09:08] yes ; is comment to end of line [09:09] except inside something else [09:09] like a quoted string or a symbol or somehting [09:09] actually - can't be inside symbol [09:09] wait, does lisp do math like (1 3 +) = 4? [09:09] (+ 1 3) [09:09] how does that work [09:09] operator - operands [09:09] reverse polish, hazardous [09:09] forward polish :) [09:09] and very descriptive [09:10] lisp does forward polish, yes. ( hazardous was showing RPN) [09:10] I've never loked polish notation [09:10] my brain really has issues parsing that [09:10] but just because 1+1 was ingrained in school [09:10] it just seems weird to me, idk why [09:10] same with the ( ) on both sides of every single thing [09:12] yes... excessive parentheses issue [09:12] especially at end of defun (function definition) [09:12] ))))))) ; sometimes [09:12] however, still far less verbose than typing XML :) [09:12] in fact, there's a mapping from XML to lisp-expressions somewhere [09:12] At least XML is self-descriptive [09:12] XML is no more descriptive than lisp :) [09:13] * brycec wonders why the hell he's defending XML [09:13] (html (head (title "foo")) (body (a href="bar"))) [09:13] that'd be the lispy equivalent of a web page [09:14] RandalSchwartz: that can be broken over multiple lines, right? eg: (html\n (head \n(title "foo")\n)\n) ? [09:14] sure [09:14] because then it's exactly as readable as html :) [09:14] whitespace optional [09:15] cool [09:15] i really hate xml too [09:15] :L [09:15] i use json or yaml when possible, xml just pisses me off beyond belief and i don't know why [09:15] <3 JSON [09:19] xml has schema validation. and inertia. and "Enterprise" tooling. JSON is young, but it could compete with schema validation and increasing adoption. [09:20] it's nice that when forced to use YAML, I can use JSON instead [09:20] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 252 seconds) [09:20] since JSON is a subset of YAML [09:20] I hate the whole indentation-is-significant part of YAML [09:20] json kind of has basic schema validation in the form of bool/int/string i guess? [09:20] well it's implied at least [09:21] *** heavysixer has joined #arpnetworks [09:21] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer [09:21] true. but Big Co.'s <3 the ability to swap WSDL files and presto! integration done. [09:22] it has a basic schema defined inherently by the syntax [09:22] what's fun is double-encoding XML, because you're passing an XML payload to SOAP :) [09:24] my prediction is that JSON will eventually eclipse XML as the preferred markup. due to it beauty and simplicity. someone will write the pieces that happend to be missing today. [09:25] at least in the scope i'm employed in, XML is the way [09:25] (today) [09:25] and even that isn't complete. the majority of integrations we deal with are still .csv or columnar or *gasp* EDI [09:26] YAML is more complete than JSON already though [09:26] YAML can do objects, and recursive data structures [09:26] JSON will likely never do that [09:30] *** heavysixer_ has joined #arpnetworks [09:30] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer_ [09:32] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 256 seconds) [09:32] *** heavysixer_ is now known as heavysixer [09:45] *** heavysixer_ has joined #arpnetworks [09:45] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer_ [09:46] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 260 seconds) [09:46] *** heavysixer_ is now known as heavysixer [09:47] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Client Quit) [09:47] that being said i hate soap and wsdl [09:48] much prefer rest stff [09:52] ditto [09:52] REST is the future. SOAP can DIAF [09:58] hazardous: plz2be replacing all my kit that speaks XML with equivalent REST conversant kit. [09:58] :) [09:59] :) [09:59] mikeputnam: i might just have a different oulook in things [09:59] im like.. a kid, i guess [09:59] i've never really knwon SOAP or WSDL much - almost every service api i've used has been restful [10:00] as a fellow human, i too prefer REST. but as an employee tasked with making random systems talk, the only sane option available to me is XML. [10:00] :( [10:02] and that's if i'm lucky! if i'm unlucky i get to muck around in arbitrarily formatted flat files. [10:03] but all of it is better than the alternatave: Excel [10:03] * mikeputnam barfs a little [10:07] *** heavysixer has joined #arpnetworks [10:07] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer [10:13] mikeputnam: microsoft access db shared on a network drive being used as a rdbms [10:13] add finger quotes where apporopriate [10:13] azardous: hosted on a linux system as a crm app [10:14] sharepoint running on mono too?? [10:14] wait i thought we were discussing terrible practices not the last level of hell [10:14] that was my 1st admin job back in the 90s [10:14] I've seen this (access on a shared drive). It was, um, fragile [10:14] it kind of weirds me out when people bring up the 90s, the only thing i remember is like 2003 onward [10:14] * toddf mumbles about oplock enabling to make it happy [10:16] * brycec mumbles about rolling-release distros and daily upgrades [10:17] at least you didn't have to build a dvd image everytime you changed a system so that ceo of persnickety client could re-install suse w/out knowing what they were doing [10:17] haha [10:17] brycec i have some ubuntu lts stuff running [10:17] No, it's USB drives here. [10:17] and it has like 10-15 new 'package updates' [10:17] every singel day [10:17] it weirds me out [10:18] hazardous: they're just reminding you that they're still supporting it! [10:18] "change one sentence in the docs, package bump!" [10:20] Welcome to Ubuntu 13.04 (GNU/Linux 3.8.0-19-generic x86_64) [10:20] 84 packages can be updated. [10:20] 44 updates are security updates. [10:20] NICE [10:20] Debian [10:20] ftw [10:20] how many of the 44 security updates are due to running-by-default daemons? [10:21] debian (basis of maemo) is what screwed up my n900 [10:21] it's updating gnupg, apt, things like that [10:21] need to recover some data off it after I figure out how to boot to a root shell and finish properly soldering its usb connector, then .. either sell it or see if openbsd can boot some century soon .. ;-) [10:21] which is really strange because it's a fresh install [10:21] off a netboot iso [10:22] they can't be bothered to build consistency, it all gets washed out in the list of updated packages on the ftp site, don't you know? [10:24] Need to get 121 MB of archives. [10:24] After this operation, 417 MB of additional disk space will be used. [10:24] A+ [10:25] compression ftw [10:26] I love the "net install size" I get when upgrading Arch. Fun to see when packages have a bunch of new stuff, or bunches of useless files have been removed. Usually it's under +/-1MB though [10:27] brycec: you should have BryceBot join the channel ;) [10:27] happily :D [10:27] *** BryceBot has joined #arpnetworks [10:28] hi BryceBot [10:28] Hello to you too, brycec [10:28] If anyone has a problem, let me know [10:28] * up_the_irons is going through scrollback [10:28] @wiki ARP Networks [10:28] Address Resolution Protocol :: Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) is a telecommunications protocol used for resolution of network layer addresses into link layer addresses, a critical function in multiple-access networks. ARP was defined by RFC 826 in 1982. It is Internet Standard STD 37. It is also the name of the program for manipulating these addresses in most operating systems.... http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Address%20Resolution%20Protocol [10:28] eh, close enough. Guess ARP doesn't have a page [10:29] (BryceBot's most useful features, I feel, are providing information about links posted, eg. Youtube info, wikipedia articles, etc) [10:29] (There is also @google of course.) [10:29] (And many, many more) [10:30] gizmoguy: what kind of provisioning do you do with theforeman? [10:31] RandalSchwartz: "medium chain fatty acids go right to the cells, no need for the liver to chop it up into a different length" <-- you got this down to a science! [10:31] *** first2know has quit IRC (Remote host closed the connection) [10:32] RandalSchwartz: heavysixer got his cable cut yesterday actually, so he's backhoe fading... [10:33] indeed [10:33] still studying 125 health blogs dailys [10:33] daily [10:33] sheesh [10:34] That's a lot [10:36] well, most of them don't have things every day [10:37] and I skim headlines a lot [10:37] makes sense [10:38] hello BryceBot ! [10:38] Hello to you too, up_the_irons [10:39] omg he replies [10:40] to many things [10:40] BryceBot: o/ [10:40] \o [10:41] Just be careful talking about node.js [10:41] BAREMETAL!!! [10:42] Soon, I hope, BryceBot will be running on ARP [10:43] :) [10:43] randalschwartz: knowing what you do for a living, I presume you've got it down to a website agregator that you look at one page to see updates on rather than actually visit 125 urls daily [10:43] node.js [10:43] BAREMETAL!!! [10:43] node.js [10:43] BAREMETAL!!! [10:43] mongodb [10:43] big data hadoop 10gb [10:44] Oh geez, nearly forgot one of its best features [10:44] I like it big [10:44] twss [10:44] Okay! twss! 'I like it big' [10:44] it'll learn [10:44] twss? [10:44] That was 28.43% what she said. 'it'll learn' [10:44] what does twss mean [10:44] @google TWSS [10:44] 32,600 total results returned for 'TWSS', here's 3 [10:44] Urban Dictionary: twss (http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=twss) Short for that's what she said. Only to be used in situations where saying that's what she said would be deemed inappropriate. Usually said under b... [10:44] bvandenbos/twss · GitHub (https://github.com/bvandenbos/twss) twss - Pre-trained That's-What-She-Said (TWSS) classifier in Ruby. [10:44] TWSSstories.com | That's What She Said Stories & Jokes (http://www.twssstories.com/) Aug 5, 2013 ... TWSS Stories is a website where fans of The Office and funny jokes can share and laugh at the that's what she said jokes that occur in ... [10:45] Anyhow, 96% is the threshold [10:45] @google arpnetworks [10:45] 1,630 total results returned for 'arpnetworks', here's 3 [10:45] this seems like it might get spammy [10:45] ARP Networks Homepage (http://www.arpnetworks.com/) ARP Networks is a leading provider of high performance VPS, IP transit, and colocation solutions. [10:45] arpnetworks (arpnetworks) on Twitter (https://twitter.com/arpnetworks) The latest from arpnetworks (@arpnetworks). Provider of data center services in Los Angeles. @bsdvps focuses on our VPS product line. Los Angeles. [10:45] ARP Networks VPS Services (http://www.arpnetworks.com/vps) RAM, Storage, Bandwidth, Monthly. Small. 512 MB 256 MB, 5 GB, 200 GB 100 GB, $10, Order. Medium. 768 MB 512 MB, 10 GB, 300 GB 200 GB, $15, Order. [10:46] hazardous: only if abused [10:46] then again, given how quiet the channel is normally... [10:46] hazardous: I think the 'newness' effect should wear off in a bit, seems a decent service imho [10:47] thanks toddf :) [10:47] brycec: do you have a faq or howto or words of wisdom wrt brycebot? aka tricks we can learn, things that just wont work, etc [10:47] Agree, hoping the "let's everybody play with it" will wear off soon [10:47] brycebot: where is your blog! [10:47] blag [10:47] toddf: Last I counted, BryceBot responds to 250-300 different triggers [10:47] so... not documented, no [10:48] i just did an apt-get update on ubuntu [10:48] 2 new packages [10:48] lol, who has time for blogging?? [10:48] it's been nine minutes [10:48] hazardous: o/ [10:48] Need to get 56.6 MB of archives. [10:48] After this operation, 236 MB of additional disk space will be used. [10:48] compression owns [10:48] brycec: well, perhaps you could randomly spew a few things in here to get those of us who like the concept started. like, privmsg brycebot 'help' and we will get all there is to know or ? [10:49] @help [10:49] .help [10:49] !help [10:49] hazardous, if you need help, just ask in the channel. If someone knows the answer, they will reply. [10:49] Not even a help [10:49] ...lol [10:49] FYI BryceBot's commands are prefixed with @ [10:49] so @google @weather @wiki @define [10:49] @py print "Hello" [10:49] Hello [10:49] @py pwd [10:49] NameError: name 'pwd' is not defined [10:50] (The Python is run on Google AppEngine, so I'm not worried about BryceBot being compromised) [10:50] @py import os;os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)) [10:50] @py import os;print os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)) [10:50] /base/data/home/apps/tumbolia/1.350949564586199535/service [10:50] oh you're using that thing [10:50] Also, word of warning - sometimes, quite often, BryceBot will lag like a motherfucker. This is because it's on Chunkhost and the loadavg just skyrocketed. [10:51] lol [10:51] chunkhost [10:51] the worst host i have ever seen [10:51] hazardous: I'm using the same appspot that Phenny uses, yes [10:51] i remember them spamming forums with $8 16gb vpses [10:51] and it turns out [10:51] $1500 setup fee [10:51] hazardous: yeah... Didn't used to be that bad [10:51] the entire thing is just horrendously terrible [10:51] LOL [10:51] *** mkb is now known as martinb [10:51] *** martinb is now known as mkb [10:51] (But BryceBot is written in PHP, not Python like most IRC bots) [10:52] want a laugh bryce [10:52] @vin [10:52] they ran ads like http://hdfs.elo.pw/LcdE [10:52] @mrt [10:52] @chuck [10:52] The 5 Ds of Dodgeball are in fact: Dodge, Duck, Dip, Dive, and Diesel. [10:52] No RSS entries found. [10:52] as it turns out [10:52] It is said you can't know someone until you walk a mile in their shoes. This means no one will ever know Chuck Norris because he'd kill you if you touch his shoes. [10:52] advertising like that on nerd sites [10:52] generally does not give you the expected return [10:52] but instead pisses people off immensely [10:52] hazardous: wow :/ [10:53] they hit r/programming and some others [10:53] with that ad [10:53] every single comment has been bashingi t [10:53] maybe if their service didn't suck balls... [10:53] maybe if their service didn't suck balls IN ADDITION to $1500 setup fees [10:54] If only it were simpler to migrate from xen to kvm - I can rsync it over, but then I have to ensure nothing broke and then get a real kernel and bootloader installed... I don't have time for that sort of downtime [10:54] If it were awesome, then people would say "I know it's steep, but it's worth it." tec [10:54] yeah, but at this point [10:54] note that they want it all upfront [10:54] so if you ever leave, you get 0% of it back [10:54] once you find out your service sucks balls anyways. ... [10:54] they already have your money and don't care [10:55] yeah [10:55] shame [10:57] aight back to $dayjob. Just because toddf asked so nicely, I'll work on a list of things BryceBot can do and say. [10:57] @ronswansson [10:57] @tdr [10:57] Theo de Raadt says: I'd put a fan on my bomb.. And blinking lights... [10:57] @rms [10:57] Richard Stallman says: The term "free software" has an ambiguity problem: an unintended meaning, "Software you can get for zero price," fits the term just as well as the intended meaning, "software which gives the user certain freedoms." We address this problem by publishing a more precise definition of free software, but this is... [10:57] @marco [10:57] Marco Sez... here is your list of restrictions -> freedom!!!! [10:57] @brycec [10:57] Sep 20, 2013 10:44:46 Anyhow, 96% is the threshold [10:57] @hazardous [10:57] Sep 20, 2013 10:48:14 Need to get 56.6 MB of archives. [10:57] is that thing logging [10:57] every single line of text [10:57] yes [10:57] into mysql, then does a search [10:58] @log_search chunkhost [10:58] 2 results found. Here's one at random: Sep 20, 2013 10:50:23 Also, word of warning - sometimes, quite often, BryceBot will lag like a motherfucker. This is because it's on Chunkhost and the loadavg just skyrocketed. [10:58] heh [10:58] (it is limited to the channel) [10:58] (also limited by when it's in the channel, so nothing logged before a few minutes ago) [10:59] (also giant mysql db) [10:59] MONGODB IS WEB SCALE [10:59] not that the logs are public except in @log_search results, but if privacy is a concern I'll add support for [FBI]'s no-log prefix [10:59] @help [10:59] RandalSchwartz, if you need help, just ask in the channel. If someone knows the answer, they will reply. [10:59] * RandalSchwartz grins [10:59] @tableflip [10:59] No! Fuck you, brycec!! Don't you dare un-flip this table, mcchunkie. DON'T YOU DARE! [10:59] @where_is_up_the_irons_I_need_my_VPS_activated!!! [11:00] that one's specific to another channel... [11:00] @tableflip [11:00] Flip your own goddamn table, brycec! [11:00] so hostile [11:00] right, like I said, $dayjob [11:00] *whoosh* [11:00] Bye brycec! [11:00] no-log justin bieber is cute [11:01] Oh one more thing... BryceBot can announce new OpenBSD snaps if y'all want [11:01] @openbsd sparc64 [11:01] sparc64 -> snapshots: Fri Sep 20 2013 01:48:36 GMT-0700 (PDT), packages: Thu Sep 19 2013 17:24:28 GMT-0700 (PDT) [11:02] oh and there is @man [openbsd|freebsd|linux] [11:02] @man linux w [11:02] 1,730 total results returned for 'w', here's 1 [11:02] w(1): who is logged on/what they are doing - Linux man page (http://linux.die.net/man/1/w) w displays information about the users currently on the machine, and their processes. The header shows, in this order, the current time, how long the ... [11:03] is bot open source?!??! [11:03] (it defaults to linux btw) [11:03] i remember one time i had an opensolaris vm or something [11:03] BryceBot is not, but it's built from php-irc which is. [11:03] that was the day i learnt that killall is not the same in linux [11:03] orly, lol [11:03] One of these days, I'll clean up code enough that I'm happy to publish BryceBot. But that's not today. [11:04] @log_search fbi [11:04] 1 results found. Here's one at random: Sep 20, 2013 10:58:53 not that the logs are public except in @log_search results, but if privacy is a concern I'll add support for [FBI]'s no-log prefix [11:04] @log_search %s [11:04] 133 results found. Here's one at random: Sep 20, 2013 10:36:22 well, most of them don't have things every day [11:04] ....? [11:04] @log_search %don% [11:04] 3 results found. Here's one at random: Sep 20, 2013 10:36:22 well, most of them don't have things every day [11:04] @log_search don [11:04] 3 results found. Here's one at random: Sep 20, 2013 10:53:27 If only it were simpler to migrate from xen to kvm - I can rsync it over, but then I have to ensure nothing broke and then get a real kernel and bootloader installed... I don't have time for that sort of downtime [11:04] i'm confused now [11:04] FYI log_search is already wrapped in % [11:05] @log_search don%; -- [11:05] No matches found for don%; --. [11:05] lol [11:05] lol [11:05] Yes I sanitize and escape :P [11:05] if that actually owrked i would have been disappointed in you and simultaneously snorted [11:05] @log_search "; [11:05] No matches found for ";. [11:06] BryceBot was originally built for #devious, a shell host full of very smart security-types. I would be insane to unleash that. [11:06] had to check ;-) [11:06] s/unleash/oh look, I can regex/ [11:06] BryceBot was originally built for #devious, a shell host full of very smart security-types. I would be insane to oh look, I can regex that. [11:06] s/#// [11:06] BryceBot was originally built for devious, a shell host full of very smart security-types. I would be insane to unleash that. [11:06] s/// [11:06] (regex has issues with escapes and stuff, but its basic use works) [11:06] lol [11:06] what kind of syntax on escaping [11:06] php [11:06] er, not [11:07] is it in preg_match /u mode [11:07] It doesn't escape is the issue [11:07] or something [11:07] \p{L} \p{N} work? [11:07] dunno, try it [11:07] Also supports using characters besides /, eg. s#something#otherthing# [11:07] and chaining [11:07] s/thing/stuff | s/sup/dude/ [11:08] Also dudeports using characters besides /, eg. s#somestuff#otherstuff# [11:08] s/syntax/format/ [11:08] what kind of format on escaping [11:08] and 25(?) line search - it will go back in the history 25 lines or so until it finds a match [11:08] brycec: two suggestions. 1) some @command for brycebot (nice that it responds to privmsg) that is an entry for a guide to brycebot 2) some mechanism to teach brycebot new stuff, optionally activated upon your (or a set of trusted peoples) ok .. [11:09] toddf: what do you mean by "teach new stuff"? [11:09] And like I said, I will document it [11:09] @log_search because toddf asked [11:09] @wtc [11:09] 1 results found. Here's one at random: Sep 20, 2013 10:56:29 aight back to $dayjob. Just because toddf asked so nicely, I'll work on a list of things BryceBot can do and say. [11:09] @teach brycebot @wtc World Trade Center [11:09] for example [11:10] Can i run the scanner in arpnetworks box? [11:10] ehehehee [11:10] s!eheh!e [11:10] s!eheh!e! [11:10] eehee [11:10] eehee [11:10] s!(.*)!e! [11:10] ee [11:10] s!([.*]+)!e! [11:10] You're a stinky cunt muncher, hazardous [11:10] . [11:10] maybe some day. I don't see a lot of appeal for it... Plus most of that stuff is stored in a flatfile (ini, woo) so that would have to become dynamic [11:10] * anisfarhana ducks [11:10] LOLOLOL hazardous [11:11] wat [11:11] There's a, um, protection against abuse [11:11] wtf kind of exception is that [11:11] I am happy. [11:11] brycec: you already connect to a db. load the @cmds from a db! [11:11] s@happy@pregnant@ [11:11] I am pregnant. [11:11] so basically any separator works [11:11] do you just look for sANYTHING [11:11] toddf: doesn't quite work like that [11:11] BryceBot: Congratulations. [11:11] toddf: WHY NOT KEY VALUE STORE [11:11] MONGODB IS WEB SCALE [11:11] s§n't§§ [11:11] web scaleeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee [11:12] I mean, the basic @triggers could be pretty easily, but the rest doesn't work that way [11:12] so, permit basic triggers to be in a db, and permit users to define more [11:12] Also, that would require another table and some tools for me to easily edit... which is work, and another db table (I'm not thrilled with it using a db) [11:12] @teach -> "To learn about brycebot, there is @teach1, @teach2, etc, just keep going until you are bored" [11:13] comedy option: sqlite3 [11:13] yeah, for the log search stuff, a real relational db was sorta required [11:13] brycec: permit interaction with brycebot directly instead of manipulating under the hood [11:13] ever used bitlbee? [11:13] no for log search stuff you should use mongo db because it's web scale and you can do map/reduce because it's web scale [11:13] -- actual response from someone asking me why i used riak [11:14] ha [11:14] qlist, yes, no .. map that to brycebot commands .. obviously some mechanism of authenticating oneself to brycebot would need to be done .. heh. don't let me talk you int more work, I'm just sayin what could be ;-) [11:14] toddf: give bot a copy of your pubkey [11:14] @weather 91342 [11:14] sign admin commands with your prikey [11:14] Sylmar, CA: Haze 68°F (20°C), Humidity: 56%, Wind: Calm -- For more details including the forecast and almanac, see http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=34.315369,-118.457207 or re-request this with: @weather -v 91342 [11:14] terrible idea [11:14] lol hazardous [11:14] w00t [11:14] @weather 94105 [11:14] San Francisco, CA: Overcast ☁ 64°F (17°C), Humidity: 70%, Wind: From the SSW at 1.3 MPH Gusting to 4.3 MPH -- For more details including the forecast and almanac, see http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=37.793579,-122.399330 or re-request this with: @weather -v 94105 [11:14] 68F sounds nice [11:14] 64F sounds nicer [11:14] wait [11:14] is that a utf8 cloud [11:14] @weather 83854 [11:14] Post Falls, ID: Clear 59°F (15°C), Humidity: 65%, Wind: From the NNW at 1.0 MPH Gusting to 5.0 MPH -- For more details including the forecast and almanac, see http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=47.688232,-116.867188 or re-request this with: @weather -v 83854 [11:14] @weather 73113 [11:14] yes hazardous [11:14] Oklahoma City, OK: Overcast ☁ 67°F (19°C), Humidity: 73%, Wind: From the West at 3.8 MPH Gusting to 6.9 MPH -- For more details including the forecast and almanac, see http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=35.594528,-97.460495 or re-request this with: @weather -v 73113 [11:14] @weather -v 91344 [11:14] woo, I'm coldest [11:14] Granada Hills, CA: Haze 63°F (17°C), Humidity: 93%, Wind: Calm, Pressure: 29.88inHg (1012mb) and rising, Dewpoint: 61°F (16°C), Visibility: 4Mi (6km), UV index: 1, Sunrise 06:40, Sunset: 18:53, Lunar phase: Full moon [11:14] Friday: Partly Cloudy 86°F/54°F (30°C/12°C) | Saturday: Partly Cloudy 84°F/55°F (29°C/13°C) | Sunday: Clear 82°F/52°F (28°C/11°C) | Monday: Clear 91°F/57°F (33°C/14°C) [11:14] The average high for this date is 85°F (29°C), and the record of 100°F (37°C) was set in 2012. The average low is 59°F (14°C), and the record of 52°F (11°C) was set in 1999 [11:15] omg it shows a cloud even! [11:15] where is sylmar [11:15] unicode cloud... [11:15] !weather 87114 [11:15] @weather 87114 [11:15] durr [11:15] Albuquerque, NM: Partly Cloudy ☁ 77°F (25°C), Humidity: 44%, Wind: From the SSW at 2.0 MPH Gusting to 5.0 MPH -- For more details including the forecast and almanac, see http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/findweather/getForecast?query=35.190845,-106.741302 or re-request this with: @weather -v 87114 [11:15] ❄ ☂ ☈ too [11:15] hazardous: where the I-5 and 405 meet [11:16] i don't see the aaaa stuff [11:16] this wouod probably be easier if i drove at all [11:16] /ignore BryceBot [11:16] haha [11:16] i think the highest in socal i've been is like west covina or something [11:16] Yeah. [11:16] * up_the_irons heads to the office [11:16] @xkcd sysadmin [11:16] 4 results found. Here's the top result: Shopping Teams http://xkcd.com/309/ [11:16] why not a comma separataed list [11:16] still wish that search was better :/ [11:16] of all 4 [11:17] hazardous: potential of long titles? dunno, maybe 'll do that [11:17] Comma-separated list? I hope you mean WSDL! [11:17] return all your results in xml [11:17] also potential of 100 results (just means I need to have a sane limit) [11:17] if anyone here nwats to actually read them [11:17] they can parse it out themselves [11:18] @redditcakeday brycied00d [11:18] brycied00d's Reddit cake day is January 29, 2010, making them 3 years, 33 weeks, 3 days, 14 hours, 14 minutes, 38 seconds old. Karma: 593/283. [11:18] @twitter Hello @bsdvps! [11:18] brycec: Posted successfully :) https://twitter.com/BryceBot0101/status/381120064985919488 [11:18] (there is @twitter --help, but it's a small flood) [11:18] @twitter RT @justinbieber you're so hot i want to bake cookies on you [11:18] hazardous: Posted successfully :) https://twitter.com/BryceBot0101/status/381120138486898688 [11:18] somehow i think you'll want to add a whitelist to that [11:18] @zipcode 91344 [11:18] 91344: Granada Hills, California, US [11:19] my friend had a @twitter command [11:19] it got him a secret service visit [11:19] hazardous: look at the post - every tweet is tagged to you [11:19] https://twitter.com/BryceBot0101/status/381120138486898688 [11:19] TWITTER: hazardous/#arpnetworks says: RT @justinbieber you're so hot i want to bake cookies on you (Fri Sep 20 18:18:16 +0000 2013) [11:19] still [11:19] @twitter -i BryceBot0101 [11:19] BryceBot (One Wilshire) Member since: Mon Aug 22 16:35:56 +0000 2011 [11:19] Followers: 11 | Following: 22 | Tweets: 4630 | Description: I'm an IRC bot acting as a conduit for an IRC channel on FreeNode. I post whatever They tell me to. [11:19] wait, what does it do for overlength ones [11:19] does it just cut off [11:20] been running for awhile no issues [11:20] hazardous: whatever twitter API does [11:21] http://marc.info/?l=openbsd-tech&m=137771234911297&w=2 [11:21] openbsd-tech: "games/trek: fix for tournament mode" from Christian Weisgerber @ 2013-08-28 17:51:33 [11:22] @ipng [11:22] @ping [11:22] brycec: Pong! Round-trip time: 4.2699 seconds. [11:22] @kook [11:22] I ask you to be truthful, not closed-minded. You do not agree with any appearance of compassion. One must consider realism versus prejudice. [11:22] http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813121599&Tpk=dh77kc [11:22] Intel BOXDH77KC LGA 1155 Intel H77 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX Intel Motherboard -- $119.99 [11:23] * brycec is just demonstrating random features as he thinks of them [11:23] @scottpilgrim [11:23] Yeah, I think garlic bread would have to be my favourite all-time food. I could eat it for every meal. Or just constantly, without stopping. [11:23] does anyone just want to stroke rms's beard [11:23] or is itj ust me [11:23] lal [11:24] @rms [11:24] Richard Stallman says: The explanation for "free software" is simple--a person who has grasped the idea of "free speech, not free beer" will not get it wrong again. [11:24] @uptime bot [11:24] Bot uptime: 15 days, 11 hours, 40 minutes, and 51 seconds. [11:24] @uptime host [11:24] host uptime: 30 days, 12 hours, 39 minutes, and 15.229999999981 seconds. [11:24] what is host [11:24] * brycec loves the precision [11:24] BryceBot's host [11:24] (the VPS with Chunkhost) [11:26] @strtotime +90 days [11:26] 12 weeks, 6 days, 1 hour, 0 seconds to go. [Interpreted date: Thu, 19 Dec 2013 11:25:28 -0800] [11:26] can you do DateTime class [11:26] @rot13 stuff [11:26] fghss [11:26] hazardous: eh? [11:26] (FYI strtotime() is just PHP's strtotime()) [11:27] brycec: listing urls brycebot will parse and give a summary or only with specific sites? [11:28] toddf: see http://noembed.com/providers for 95% of that [11:28] @traceroute arpnetworks.com [11:28] no ^ [11:28] @strrev evian [11:29] @reverse evian [11:29] naive [11:29] oops [11:29] @mitch [11:29] Mitch Hedberg says: My roommate said to me, 'I'm gonna go shave and use the shower; does anyone need to use the bathroom?' It's like some weird ass quiz where he reveals the answer first. [11:29] @iata LAX [11:29] LAX: Los Angeles International Airport located in Los Angeles, California, United States [11:30] hahahaha [11:30] mitch hedberg was awesome [11:30] https://plus.google.com/102781463361201302305/posts/j7tLqL7SukW [11:30] Google+: Telyne Clark: Bahahahaha!!! (41 +1's, 6 reshare) [11:31] https://alpha.app.net/bcallah/post/11264351 [11:31] App.net link: "Happy Friday everyone! :)" by bcallah [11:49] *** first2know has joined #arpnetworks [11:54] Wow [11:54] You guys so happy. [11:54] oh? [11:55] Sorry for interuppting. [11:55] Carry on. [12:16] happy? [12:18] Thanks to hazardous I'm just going to keep reading happy as [12:18] s@happy@pregnant@ [12:18] Thanks to hazardous I'm just going to keep reading pregnant as [12:19] (Dear clipboard, work as I want you to, not as you're programmed to) [12:39] up_the_irons: we have a project where we have a linux box installed with every ISP in my country [12:39] for monitoring [12:39] so I use theforeman to provision/manage those [13:17] gizmoguy: ah cool [13:18] hazardous: LOL [13:20] whoa, the newegg expansion that BryceBot does is quite handy [13:21] @twitter -i bsdvps [13:21] BSD VPS (The Internet) Member since: Tue Mar 10 18:43:12 +0000 2009 [13:21] Followers: 1090 | Following: 30 | Tweets: 400 | Description: Offering VPS services for FreeBSD, OpenBSD and NetBSD. @arpnetworks is our company-wide Twitter account. [13:21] @twitter -i arpnetworks [13:21] arpnetworks (Los Angeles) Member since: Sat Jan 03 08:18:47 +0000 2009 [13:21] Followers: 377 | Following: 21 | Tweets: 427 | Description: Provider of data center services in Los Angeles. @bsdvps focuses on our VPS product line. [13:21] @twitter -i up_the_irons [13:21] Garry Dolley (Los Angeles) Member since: Tue Sep 11 09:43:29 +0000 2007 [13:21] Followers: 429 | Following: 144 | Tweets: 2416 | Description: I'll sleep when I die [13:21] very handy [13:22] @iata stl [13:22] STL: Lambert-Saint Louis International Airport located in St. Louis, Missouri, United States [13:22] @iata sea [13:22] SEA: Seattle-Tacoma International Airport located in SeaTac (near Seattle and Tacoma), Washington, United States [13:22] @iata mia [13:22] MIA: Miami International Airport located in Miami, Florida, United States [13:25] up_the_irons: I find it so :) [13:25] I love never leaving IRC to see what a link is, thus why BryceBot decodes shortened URL's, amazon links, etc [13:28] brycec: yeah that's wicked neat [13:28] i need a new project [13:28] *** anisfarhana has quit IRC (Read error: Connection reset by peer) [13:29] http://v.gd/ebayc1100 [13:29] (Once upon a time, tweets @ BryceBot would get spit back out into IRC, but it was just noise. [13:29] haha [13:29] toddf: heh never heard of that shortener before [13:30] only twitter integration i've ever done w/a bot was a megahal bot that would tweet its last statement or a user-defined statement on command [13:31] what do you guys think of these: [13:31] http://www.ebay.com/itm/Dell-Poweredge-C1100-1U-2X-XEON-QC-L5520-2-26GHZ-NO-HDD-72GB-DDR3-Tested-/261274072295?pt=COMP_EN_Servers&hash=item3cd525f4e7 [13:31] yay freenode lag [13:31] (thanks toddf for the link ;) [13:31] @twitter -i unix2mars [13:31] Todd T. Fries (OKC,OK,US,Earth,SS,MlkyWyGlxy) Member since: Mon Nov 22 16:23:38 +0000 2010 [13:31] Followers: 151 | Following: 230 | Tweets: 67 | Description: Wife: Kyra; [13:31] Son: Charlie; [13:31] Favorite OS: OpenBSD; [13:31] Favorite vacation destination: Mars [13:31] that's what my host box is at another provider [13:31] well, similar anyway [13:31] 5520's are pretty quick [13:31] http://v.gd/ebayc1100 [13:32] http://v.gd/ebayc1100 (this time AFTER I've reloaded BryceBot) [13:32] huh wonder what's up... BryceBot ? [13:32] up_the_irons: if it helps arpnetworks, awesome. dell is always good in my book, the only limitation is your internal storage space. [13:32] brycec: it probably doesn't recognize v.gd as an url shortener [13:33] toddf: I just added it though [13:33] one of those in a soundproof closet with 4x15krpm sas disks would make a neat home vm lab server [13:35] m0unds: toddf : ah cool [13:35] (mmkay, found the issue) [13:36] up_the_irons: put it this way, if I were not strapped for $$ atm I'd be buying as many as I could afford, any number of uses including basic virtualization and/or test deploying custom virtualization environments [13:37] toddf: yeah they sure are a good deal. can't do 8x raid-10 though, so they couldn't be VM hosts, but could definitely have many other uses [13:37] which reminds me, I promoted proxmox here a few weeks back, and since have been informed that they are doing the enterprise lockin pay perscription model where instead of simply paying for support if you want it you now actually have to pay if you want the stable service and extended features of packages that aren't available to customers who just want to try the barely out of beta free version. *sigh*. It makes me so irked that I ... [13:38] ... want to find a way to create and promote a similar competing but entirely free for life product. [13:38] up_the_irons: can't do it natively. however, if you ever needed a push to try iscsi, glance at the builtin hba's that do iscsi natively and present it to the os as a scsi disk. [13:38] Isn't there already oVirt competing with it? [13:39] toddf: I know about "stable update"s and support, but what's this about extended features? What aren't I getting by being a freeloader? [13:39] toddf: oh man, too bad about proxmox [13:39] brycec: is there a 'entrely open source' and 'entirely open' distribution that does kvm virtualization? I don't care if you pay for support but for free use and to foster community development ..proxmox gets my unlike vote [13:40] I can't say as I've done any research into that field [13:40] Just saw oVirt mentioned a few times while browsing Proxmox stuff [13:40] I'm still pretty happy with my proxmox cluster [13:40] toddf: oh, so you're saying these boxes have a built-in hba that does iscsi? [13:40] brycec: I'm probably saying it wrong, clustering iirc was a biggie [13:41] up_the_irons: there do exist HBA's that have native iSCSI [13:41] up_the_irons: I was told so, please verify before taking my word for it [13:41] toddf: brycec : roger that [13:41] Or do what I do - gPXE+iscsi [13:42] toddf: I'll have to look into that I guess... The "testing" updates haven't removed any features so far [13:42] And I suppose you could stick with the distro as-downloaded for "stable" [13:43] the one thing to understand about hba's vs software iscsi is .. you can do lots of nic failover on the software side depending on the cpu and nics performance may be slightly lower. however, with the hba's I am not aware enough to know if you can have multiple hba failover on iscsi. aka multipath as it were. [13:43] (Just to be clear: I'm free and doing clustering just peachy-fine) [13:49] brycec: gPXE+iscsi? dang [13:50] It's pretty easy... [13:50] But maybe I'm just so used to PXE-all-the-things that nothing wows me anymore [13:50] yeah i've actually never used PXE to be honest [13:55] good fun for large school labs - weekly automated workstation re-image [13:56] nice [13:56] of which pxe plays a part [13:56] We use it for imaging servers before they ship [13:56] also wake-on-lan [13:56] up_the_irons: 1and1 hosting pxeboots all their servers, and uses web ui to change the config if it is to land on the local disk or one of a list of rescue images with nice fully featured initrd's [13:56] mikeputnam: that is useful if you have systems that poweroff of course ;-) [13:57] yeah - big student labs + power savings [13:57] toddf: ah cool [13:58] up_the_irons: not sure if your version of libvirt supports pxeboot, but hey, its a thought for the future [13:59] toddf: yeah [14:00] pxeboot options: 'OpenBSD' x '5.0 | 5.1 | 5.2 | 5.3 | 5.4' x 'cdrom | pxeboot | hard drive' x 'serial console | vga console' [14:03] sweet I got a 4 year review! [14:03] http://www.webhostingtalk.com/showthread.php?t=1305613 [14:03] toddf: that's pretty cool [14:10] wow. I think I might have been here 5 years. [14:10] I'd have to look [14:14] RandalSchwartz: you were one of the first, i can tell u that [14:15] cool [14:16] And you still haven't scared him off? Well done. [14:17] i can't believe i'm at a year already [14:18] not only that, I dragged my client along as well :) [14:21] the captain [14:23] Does it show the signup date on the arpnetworks Web dashboard somewhere? [14:23] Maybe under invoices? [14:23] I see it was FreeBSD 7.2, which was May 2009. [14:23] Oh good call. [14:24] No invoices is too new. [14:24] lol [14:25] Every time I look at the Web dashboard up_the_irons has added something new. I love that. [14:25] :) [14:27] I can't decide between adding a second VPS or upgrading to a bigger plan :( [14:27] oooh - I should probably log in some day :) [14:27] bigger plan = easy upgrade, redundant VPS = work to make things split nicely and redundant [14:30] hey up_the_irons I normally wouldn't bug you in IRC, but... I emailed Support on July 21 and even received the autoresponse, but never a reply from you... [14:30] (well I'll bug you in IRC, just not about emails) [14:33] brycec: oh wow, that definitely got lost then [14:33] i try to flush the queue every 24 hours [14:33] heh I'd totally forgotten [14:33] and july 21 is way long ago... [14:33] was a question about console baud [14:34] wasn't until I started writing you a new one that past emails popped up [14:42] I love getting an autoresponse to my question about an upgrade pointing me at a FAQ article that says to email support, exactly what I'm already doing :P [14:44] FAQ-ception! [14:52] my /mnt is from 2009 [14:52] I presume that's when I started :) [14:52] nov 21, 2009 - yeah that seems about right [14:53] Heh... I have files in /tmp from 2010 [14:54] lol [14:56] not very /tmp. :) [14:56] including my /tmp/screens :) [14:56] haven't used screens in years [14:56] screen [14:56] switched to tmux a couple years ago, not ever going back [14:57] lol [14:57] My /tmp is cleaned out every boot [14:58] On my desktops, /tmp is a ramfs anyways [15:00] 1 May 2009. Good idea on checking /mnt. [15:02] freebsd doesn't do that by default [15:02] * brycec would check /mnt, but he's reinstalled since then [15:02] *** Bluerise has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 260 seconds) [15:05] *** Bluerise has joined #arpnetworks [15:21] mike-burns: yeah, you and mhoran1 were like one of the very first. there's one person before you two, but he doesn't hang out here (not an irc person) [15:23] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 260 seconds) [15:32] *** anisfarhana has joined #arpnetworks [15:34] *** heavysixer has joined #arpnetworks [15:34] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer [15:35] IRC people are a special breed [15:36] I don't sleep almost 3 days [15:36] Yes! [15:38] where are at anisfarhana? [15:39] Asia [15:39] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Ping timeout: 240 seconds) [15:41] *** heavysixer has joined #arpnetworks [15:41] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer [15:46] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Quit: heavysixer) [15:48] *** heavysixer has joined #arpnetworks [15:48] *** ChanServ sets mode: +o heavysixer [15:50] Why RandalSchwartz? [15:50] Wanna come here? [15:55] what part of asia [15:57] @wa How big is Asia? [15:57] Asia->total area;total->18.83 million mi^2, largest->6.593 million mi^2 (Russia), smallest->5.405 mi^2 (Cocos Keeling Islands);5.25×10^14 ft^2 (square feet);4.877×10^7 km^2 (square kilometers);4.877×10^13 m^2 (square meters);~~ 0.33 × land area on the earth ( 1.4894×10^8 km^2 );~~ 1.3 × surface area of the moon ( 4 pi moon radii^2 );~~ 1.4 × largest extent of the British Empire (~~ 36 Mm^2 );Radius r of a circle from A = pir^2:, ->2 [15:57] Wow, Asia's big. [15:58] The area of Asia is 3x that of the Moon. wow. [15:58] And happens to be 1/3 the land area of the Earth [15:59] And today is Asia Argento's brithday! [15:59] birthday [16:00] .. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asia_Argento [16:00] Asia Argento :: Aria Asia Maria Vittoria Rossa Argento (born 20 September 1975) is an Italian actress, singer, model, and director. Family and early life Her mother is actress Daria Nicolodi and her father is Dario Argento, an Italian film director, producer and screenwriter, well known for his work in the Italian giallo genre and for his influence on modern horror and slasher movies. Her maternal great-grandfather was composer... [16:00] *** heavysixer has quit IRC (Quit: heavysixer) [16:02] Kuala Lumpur. [16:02] @wa What is the area of Kuala Lampur? [16:02] Couldn't grab results from json stringified precioussss. [16:02] try it again BryceBot [16:02] kyl: I do. [16:02] @wa What is the area of Kuala Lampur? [16:03] Couldn't grab results from json stringified precioussss. [16:03] well feck you too Wolfram Alpha [16:03] @wa What is the area of Kuala Lumpur? [16:03] Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (state)->area;94.21 mi^2 (square miles) (0.074% of total for Malaysia);2.626×10^9 ft^2 (square feet);244 km^2 (square kilometers);2.44×10^8 m^2 (square meters);~~ ( 0.012 ~~ 1\/85 ) × total area of Wales (~~ 8023 mi^2 );~~ ( 0.061 ~~ 1\/16 ) × total area of Rhode Island (~~ 1545 mi^2 );~~ 2 × Walt Disney World area (~~ 122 km^2 );Radius r of a circle from A = pir^2:, ->28914 feet, ->5.476 miles, ->8.813 km ( [16:03] ha [16:03] * anisfarhana pokes brycec :P [16:03] Certainly narrowed it down [16:03] Twice the size of WDW. nice. [16:04] WDW? [16:05] Walt Disney World [16:08] lol [16:45] *** ThalinVien` has quit IRC (Quit: leaving) [17:49] *** ThalinVien has joined #arpnetworks [18:07] RandalSchwartz: What does tmux provide to you that screen didn't? Another off topic question: are you an irssi fan or more of a weechat person? [18:07] neither of the latter [18:07] irc.el [18:08] tmux provides a nice shell interface, so I can script configurations [18:11] One of my favourite things about tmux is how well it handles multiple clients of different dimensions all connected to the same window. [18:16] tmux comes with OpenBSD [19:34] Wait. Does that mean OpenBSD is in tmux or tmux is in OpenBSD? [19:48] haha [20:59] hi everypony [20:59] brycec: am i allowed to pm it commands [20:59] or is it channel only [21:14] it works if you pm it [21:16] @wa average length of american penis in parsecs [21:16] convert average length of an American erect human penis (age > 17 years) to parsecs;4.991×10^-18 pc (parsecs);1.54 dm (decimeters);15.4 cm (centimeters);154 mm (millimeters);0.154 meters;~~ (0.2 to 0.5) × elliptical stride length ( 12 to 22 in );~~ 0.55 × stair tread depth (~~ 11 in );~~ 1.8 × typical credit card length ( 85.6 mm );Light travel time t in vacuum from t = x\/c:, ->514 ps (picoseconds);Light travel time t in an optical fi [21:16] does it really know that [21:16] haha [21:38] *** anisfarhana has quit IRC (Quit: Leaving) [21:44] @wa average distance from earth to mars [21:44] Mars->average distance from Earth;1.7 au (astronomical units);2.54×10^8 km (kilometers);2.54×10^11 meters;158 million miles;~~ 1.7 × mean Earth-Sun distance (~~ 1 au );Light travel time t in vacuum from t = x\/c:, ->14 minutes;Light travel time t in an optical fiber t = 1.48x\/c:, ->21 minutes;Solar radiation pressure from P = L_(.)\/(c4pir^2):, ->1.6 µPa (micropascals);current distance from Earth->2.193 au, 18.24 light minutes, averag [21:45] @wa maximum distance from earth to mars [21:45] Couldn't grab results from json stringified precioussss. [21:49] hazardous: yes you can PM it [22:00] *** easymac has quit IRC (Read error: Connection reset by peer) [22:00] *** easymac has joined #arpnetworks [22:00] *** easymac has quit IRC (Changing host) [22:00] *** easymac has joined #arpnetworks [22:37] *** wak has joined #arpnetworks