Some middle-aged guy on the Internet. Seen a lot of it, occasionally regurgitating it, trying to be amusing and informative.

Lurked Digg until v4. Commented on Reddit (same username) until it went full Musk.

Was on kbin.social (dying/dead) and kbin.run (mysteriously vanished). Now here on fedia.io.

Really hoping he hasn’t brought the jinx with him.

Other Adjectives: Neurodivergent; Nerd; Broken; British; Ally; Leftish

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Cake day: August 13th, 2024

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  • That one’s from a common Proto-Indo-European ancestor rather than from a specific known language outside of PIE culture.

    I mean, it’s plausible that “water” also comes from one specific language to have ended up in PIE, but it’s further back than we can trace, so we can’t be as certain as we can be for “channel”. There’s also that water is a lot more fundamental to a language than channels, or reeds, are, which makes it less likely to be a borrowing.

    On the other hand, PIE did have at least two words for each of water (ancestors of “water” and “aqua”) and fire (“fire” and “igni(s)-”), if not other words. This is somewhat reminiscent of how English ended up with a lot of doubled words after the Normans took over a thousand year ago, so maybe something like that happened back then too.



  • But if you do decide to do this, and I should stress that this does not constitute a suggestion to do so, make sure to go out in clearly identifiable footwear and clothing and with no head or face coverings so that the camera can get a good look at you before it dies, you filthy, filthy vandal.


  • There was this one story that lives rent free in my head, which is terrifying when you realise. And this comment might pass it on, so read on at your peril.

    It might be a Steven Baxter story. I know I read it in an anthology, but it could have been a different author.

    The story is about a person who lives in a world where it’s illegal to not use augmented reality devices every moment of every day, to ensure that you’re seeing enough ads and behaving like a law-abiding citizen.

    The protagonist is in charge of an investigation into people who deliberately live outside this system and seek to disrupt it. One of these people may or may not be the protagonist’s son.

    The story meanders for a bit but the investigation is hampered by the very technology it seeks to enforce, so the protagonist insists that their augmented reality device temporarily disable everything.

    It claims to have done so, but it soon becomes clear that augmentation is still going on.

    So the protagonist invokes an override to turn it all off.

    And then...

    The story f**king ends with “And then…”

    My fear, intended or otherwise is therefore:

    The story ending is the device turning off. If protagonist still exists, they are now witnessing the reader’s reality through their eyes. There’s a protagonist stuck in my head unable to get back into their own world.




  • So I have a few.

    Staying in bed of a morning until I can’t bear to remain there. Usually my body craves getting up one way or another before my brain does on account of less than stellar mental health. (Which also explains why there aren’t any external reasons to get up. I can serve no masters in this state.)

    Sugar on my otherwise relatively sugarless cereal. It’s the cheapest I can get and the laws here have taken most of the fun out of cereal anyway, so there’s not much to enjoy in them at all otherwise.

    Even having cereal come to that since I’m rarely up what I consider early enough to have it.

    Spending all day on the computer Edit: doing what I want, except for food and bathroom visits.

    Going to bed at an hour that makes sense relative to my usual morning. Using the electric blanket.

    You might ask if any of these are guilty, but yes, yes they are. There is constant pressure from society to be an early riser who works for someone else from 8 till 8, six days a week, then spends whatever’s left looking after house and home, and if you fail at any of that, you’re judged. And I feel every bit of it from without as well as within.



  • palordrolap@fedia.iotoProgrammer Humor@programming.devStill valid
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    7 days ago

    If you’re talking about applications that can be made to act how their namesake predecessors did 30 years ago, sure. The Unix mindset is all about that.

    But don’t be fooled into thinking that anything on a modern Unix-like system hasn’t been modified, patched or rewritten from scratch at some point in the last 30 years. More than once. Even /bin/false has a changelog.





  • There are instances where a creditor will have a claim on the deceased’s estate. For example, mortgages and car loans generally aren’t written off when the named bill payer dies. (Edit: late correction. Payee is the creditor. Payer is the debtor. I think most people understood what I meant even with the wrong word. D’oh)

    Other things will depend on how hard the creditor is willing to try to get the money they’d otherwise lose.



  • I dunno. There are some of us who run Mint not because we don’t know what we’re doing but because we do* and we don’t want to have to deal with any more nonsense than we absolutely have to.

    From that small cohort, there are those of us who’ll frown when all we have open is a few browser tabs and the system’s using 8GB of RAM, twice the “recommended” spec. On startup with nothing running it’s over 1GB.

    It’s hard not to see it as wasteful when you’re old enough to remember perfectly good machines running on single-digit megabytes. **

    * Or at least, think we do.

    ** Yes, things are much more complex these days. But are they really a thousand times more complex?


  • There’s at least a couple of puns going on here. You may already know some of the following.

    First of all, Perl is a programming language that has been around since the late '80s. It was designed as a system administrating, text processing glue language with aspects of shell scripting, awk, sed, the greps and a whole host of other things.

    This is the first part of one of the puns. Perl was, and may still be, used as a filter in command line pipelines.

    The other pun comes from the fact that perhaps the most important Perl book, Programming Perl was published by O’Reilly who generally put some sort of apparently unrelated animal on the cover of their titles. For Perl this was a camel.

    Camel is, or was, a brand of cigarettes. Therefore this is the second pun. The pack of cigarettes has “Perl” where it should read “Camel” but still has the picture of a Camel, like both the book and the cigarettes.

    Cigarattes, of course, often have filters on the mouth end of them, which completes the first pun. I do not know if any Camel cigarettes have these, but that’s not strictly important. Some cigarettes do. Perl-branded Camels almost certainly would do.

    The third (fourth?) pun, which may or may not be intended, is that some people think that programming in Perl is damaging to one’s health.