Apparently, the past four hours of coding RPC function calls could have been replaced, completely, with a single line of code, which would also be faster, more reliable, and use less memory.
Bugger.
Apparently, the past four hours of coding RPC function calls could have been replaced, completely, with a single line of code, which would also be faster, more reliable, and use less memory.
Bugger.
Something I came across today while working: Students for War.
As far as I can tell, they’re serious. And personally, I find this very disturbing – the attitude of people who very obviously have never been anywhere close to an actual war. Or if they have, and still have this attitude, then this is even more fscked-up than I thought.
Incidentally, they don’t seem to be advocating any particular war. Until fairly recently, their site was advocating war with Iraq; now they’re advocating war with North Korea, and on their site are hints that they’re interested in Syria and Iran soon afterwards. Now, while I may agree with some (most certainly not all!) of their individual statements, the idea of forming a group for the simple purpose of advocating bloodshed in general seems somewhere between lunatic and demoniac.
Perhaps I’m reacting too much to an (amazingly) ill-conceived name; but these people seem like the exact sort of people I would like to keep the hell away from.
Making the rounds at work. Someone has obviously put a great deal of thought into this – perhaps a bit too much.
I just read the most amazing/disturbing review of the latest Harry Potter. It’s worth reading, with or without the book, just because it’s so remarkably over-the-top with its references and giant enumerations. Either the writer (John Leonard) is an enormous fan of Umberto Eco, or he was very, very stoned when he wrote this, or both.
It is moved. All the furniture’s in the new place, and modulo some assembly work (fairly light) and some last few things to move (a few lamps, etc.) the new place is ready for commissioning. A few more days and it should be completely liveable.
Blue elf needs coffee badly.
Given that my current main e-mail reading system is flaking: What do you all recommend for a good, stable e-mail solution? I need POP or (preferably) IMAP, and web access would be nice, and (importantly) a trustworthy provider. (And, unlike the past decade or so, I’m not in a position to maintain my own server…)