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12:10 AM
@polym I started using Arch several months back out of desperation. I'm surprised to be very happy with it.
 
 
2 hours later…
slm
2:15 AM
@Braiam you around?
 
@slm nope
 
slm
2:43 AM
what did you want done with the tag synonyms?
 
@slm, I flagged a comment. You might want to take a look at it.
 
slm
@Ramesh - I saw it. I can only delete it or dismiss it.
the last bit at the end, right?
 
@slm, yeah. It is not seeming good.
 
slm
@Ramesh - that's gone now.
 
@slm, that's nice :)
 
2:57 AM
@slm I think terdon did it
 
slm
3:10 AM
@Braiam - what are these approves on this page?
I've never seen this page, I believe caleb posted it earlier
 
@slm actually I did. That's the page where all suggested edits can be voted by the community, because you are a mod you see them all, but I see only 2 that I can vote
 
slm
were there some synonyms you guys wanted voted on?
@Braiam - like process -> pid, also password -> passwd
 
@slm yeah
 
slm
3:27 AM
@Braiam - what about wildcards -> patterns
 
@slm that you should ask Gilles...
 
 
7 hours later…
10:04 AM
:D
 
 
1 hour later…
11:09 AM
Is there a way to reuse the wildcard match in a sed statement
i mean
for example
sed -i.bak "s/term.*term2/replacement\;/g" s
and i want to put the findings in .*
in the replacement
like sed -i.bak "s/term.*term2/term.*replacement\;/g" s
i just want to replace term2
but with the condition that term is infront of term2
there can be a string inbetween though
i can't do sed -i.bak "s/term.*term2/termreplacement\;/g" s
because then, the matching string inbetween is missing ;*
.*
 
11:51 AM
Ok i got it
it is caled backreference
called*
I needed that information for unix.stackexchange.com/a/140147/72471
 
@polym I edited your answer so it explains what you're actually doing.
Neither of the problems you state are problems. The first is not an issue and the second is already happening as you want it.
 
Ok thanks
gr<string name="test" >- test</string> still match
es
 
By the way, your approach will also break on cases like <string>foo -</string> -
 
yeah I'm relatively new to sed :D, I just tried to help^^
 
@polym Shouldn't it?
 
12:02 PM
and learn while doing so
no i dont think so, or?
 
@polym And you did! I'm just pointing out issues.
 
yes yes I amthankful for you doing that :)
that way i learn more
 
Basically, there is no good way of doing this. Ideally, the OP should use an XML parser.
 
@terdon also what do you mean by "Note that the format for -i is different for non-GNU sed (the OP is on OSX)." what is the format?
do you mean the syntax?
 
Yes, it needs a space after -i so -i .bak and not -i.bak.
 
12:06 PM
aah ok
It wasn't quite clear, can you add that information for future readers?
 
I'd just remove it. It's better that way so the OP can test whether it worked.
 
Hmm I think its valuable information though
also i tested your perl script
and somehow each string line misses the last >
the join doesn't work somehow?
or rather
the last character of each line is missing
 
Oh, damn, of course it does. Thanks, hang on.
 
:))
 
Fixed
 
12:12 PM
Works
Very nice
@terdon I didn't know about lookbehinds and backreferences. Thank you for that
You're like a sed magician
 
Yeah, those are way cool.
And no I'm not!
 
:) indeed they are.
 
I know very little about sed. I'm OK with Perl regular expressions but my sed-fu is quite limited.
Dammit, it should be possible to get multiple - handled correctly using pure regex as well.
Oh and as POSIXman pointed out, I was wrong about -i I thought the space was needed on OSX but apparently not.
 
Oh okay, nice to know :)
 
261
Q: Can you provide some examples of why it is hard to parse XML and HTML with a regex?

Chas. OwensOne mistake I see people making over and over again is trying to parse XML or HTML with a regex. Here are a few of the reasons parsing XML and HTML is hard: People want to treat a file as a sequence of lines, but this is valid: <tag attr="5" /> People want to treat < or <tag as the start of ...

 
12:36 PM
@terdon hi, what's happening. you seem to be here a lot these days. is this because of your new mod role? don't exhaust yourself.
There are, after all, 3 other mods.
 
12:53 PM
@FaheemMitha No more than usual really. :)
 
@polym Please respect the formating preferences of authors; that was a pointless edit. If you are editing other things of substance and the author was just too lazy to format their post then by all means go for it, but using code block formatting for all instances of command names is not always appreciated.
 
@Caleb I see :). Ok thanks, I'll try to differentiate and remember this in future edits.
 
I also picked my paragraphs carefully. Meanwhile there were typos that could have been fixed and there are lots of actually badly formatted posts on the site to worry about. Thanks for understanding.
 
When do you use backticks/code block formatting/highlighting ?
 
@polym You'll find plenty of people that will argue code formatting non-code is counter-productive. Personally I don't much care and there is a time and place for it when it disambiguates something but don't edit just for that.
@polym Personally, I reserve code formatting for code snippets or when it is a command with instructions to be run as entered, not when just off handedly mentioning an application name.
 
1:01 PM
@Caleb But isn't the sudo command run
?
 
any mods (on SO) able to lend a hand for a minute? (I know this isn't really the place to be looking, but I see blue!)
tl;dr it appears someone has a script randomly staring then unstaring messages in this chat room chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/17/javascript - looking at the ws we've pretty well determined who it is as well.
 
@polym There is a difference between saying something like "I suggest only giving sudo access to trusted users" and saying "you can run sudo -s to get a root shell".
 
@Caleb hm yeah you're right. So if a command is run, highlight it. If the application is only mentioned and not used in any way, don't highlight it?
 
@polym That's my preference / suggestion but again don't make edits to just change that preference.
 
@rlemon the SO chat is on a different server and we're not mods there. I'll try and ping an SO mod for you.
Ah, Caleb did already.
 
1:06 PM
@terdon yes I realize the server issue. I just assumed you guys had a better line of communication than me just searching random chat rooms on so :P
 
@Caleb Ok. I won't change any preference of yours :). Just tell me if I do something wrong, I'll fix it then. I'll try to adapt to your preference :). Thanks!
I never intented to change any preferences of you, @Caleb :)
 
@rlemon We do, Caleb asked for help, you should be receiving it soon. Also, in general, asking in the tavern would probably work better. A lot of SO mods and SE employees hang out there.
 
@polym That goes for more than just me. Don't edit anybody's posts in general just to change that. Again if there are other issues you are fixing then it's fine to clean that up too, but the impetus for the edit should be the other things.
 
ahh, thankyou. I don't often venture outside of my little circle of rooms (however it seems that little circle is getting larger)
 
:)
 
1:09 PM
@rlemon I've dropped this in the MOD room, hopfully some SO folks or employees will take care of it from there.
 
@rlemon next time try The Tavern
 
@polym The latest suggested edit from you that I reviewed looked very good. Please keep in mind that your changes (until you have achieved 2000 rep) do have to be reviewed by 2 people (unless improved), so make them substantial as Caleb also indicated. The system already forces you to have a minimum of (I think) 6 characters that need to change.
After 2000 rep you are supposed to know what you are doing and can also make minor adjustments. But by then you also don't earn points for accepted suggested edits anymore...
 
@Anthon ok :). I just want to learn how to edit correctly. If you guys tell me what I am doing wrong, I'll adapt to it and fix it. I am editing mostly questions, because there are spelling or grammar mistakes, improper paragraphing, missing highlighting in executed commands or code sections, unclear questions and because I think some things could be improved like changing a paragraph full of questions to a list of questions :). That way, the question is more appealing to the reader
 
1:24 PM
Personally, I do tend to use backticks for command names. It's just that sometimes it gets too much and it makes it harder to read instead of clearer.
 
@polym never ever use backticks/code blocks for highlighting... is just evil and looks pretty bad
 
By highlighting I mean highlighting code snippets, sorry for the confusion
code snippets which are used in the midst of a sentence for example
or rather commands
 
there are cases where even commands/binaries I don't use backticks
 
1:41 PM
@polym I think you are already getting the hang of it. There are of course slight variations in the preferences of the people frequenting this site, and between the people doing your suggested edit reviews. Just keep an eye on those of yours that don't get accepted and/or are further improved and you'll be doing fine.
 
 
1 hour later…
2:55 PM
blast from the past. Was looking for a CD in my archives and came across these
 
Heh :) Old backups?
 
@casey What is it?
 
@FaheemMitha sunsite hosted source tarballs for a ton of packages. If you were running something like Slackware with no package manager back in the day, it was a good place to find everything you needed. LSL occasionally would snapshot the FTP site onto CDs and it was a decent option if you didn't have fast internet
 
@casey sunsite as in at unc? aka metalab?
 
I don't recall if I ordered them because I needed them or if I just wanted to find a reason to send LSL a few dollars
 
3:01 PM
And i think it changed its name again too.
 
@FaheemMitha yep
 
@casey Slackware didn't have a package manager? And LSL was selling CDs with handwritten labels?
LSL == Linux System Labs?
 
@FaheemMitha those labels are printed, its just an odd font
yes, Linux System Labs
 
I'm guessing that they are defunct, anyway.
@casey oh
 
probably
Those CD's were probably mastered in 2000 +/- a year
 
3:23 PM
Can someone help me debug the iostat output?
 
3:49 PM
@casey Yes, long time ago.
 
@Ramesh Post it, if anyone can, they will.
 
@terdon thanks.
avg-cpu:  %user   %nice %system %iowait  %steal   %idle
           1.29    0.00    0.19   23.31    0.00   75.22

Device:            tps   Blk_read/s   Blk_wrtn/s   Blk_read   Blk_wrtn
sda             425.64        98.49      3966.64   92303766 3717366564
sdb               0.82         6.62        55.12    6207156   51654368
sdc               0.47        59.75         0.00   55996712        792
I just wanted to know if there is some I/O activity happening in the machine based on this output.
 
4:21 PM
Is there any way to how certain questions get so many views?
12
Q: How to close ports in Linux?

user74080I have some question in closing port, I think I got some strange things. When I use execute nmap --top-ports 10 192.168.1.1 it shows that 23/TCP port is open. But when I execute nmap --top-ports 10 localhost it show that 23/tcp port is closed. Which of them is true? I want to close this ...

 
slm
4:44 PM
@Creek They typically get a high position on the hot questions or get tweeted out.
 
@Creek That one made it into the HOt Questions list I think.
You can see if it was tweeted by checking the revision history (it wasn't).
 
Ahh I see, I've seen them on HN and Twitter feeds but I didn't think about the hot q's
It just amazes me how some of the questions get such high views
 
HN?
 
Ah
 
slm
5:01 PM
@Creek yeah it's a bit of luck for that. But it does seem that often what IMO are weak Q's get picked up more frequently and have higher views then much stronger Q's. We've discussed this at length here and it seems to be that weaker Q's have a broader appeal since they're easier for many to understand.
@Creek - if you're looking for Q's that have 10k+ views I believe unix.stackexchange.com/users/5614/naftuli-tzvi-kay is the best at asking these types of Q's. He has ~10 gold badges and seems to have a knack for asking them.
 
@slm hah, yep... AKA:
well, that didn't onebox well.
 
5:30 PM
@slm I've noticed his Q's get alot of publicity. None of the highly viewed ones are mindbogglers so I think you're right about weak questions. It seems like the most popular Q's are ones with a million possible answers or they're about some ancient unquestioned part of *nix, like why is ~ short for home
 
@Creek nailed it
that, and cows
 
slm
@Creek Yes so the ancient stuff is pretty well covered, I've poured over them looking for holes, the best bet is to ask a novice Q that's just so duh or find something very novel, which is really hard to do.
 
well, hard to do right
 
slm
@Creek - also current technology Q's are good candidates, that's what unix.stackexchange.com/users/5614/naftuli-tzvi-kay is pretty good at doing. I would look for docker or lxc or cgroup types of Q's since they're new tech that you'll get the rest of the world catching up to which will result in getting a lot of views as time goes by
throwing a bounty on a Q can also get extra traction.
 
or a Wayland question
 
slm
5:34 PM
If you've ever been on the amusement partk ride called the tilt-a-whirl getting a Q w/ 10k+ legs is a lot like that ride.
 
@slm agreed about the old Q's, after I was on SE for a couple weeks I realized that all the REALLY good questions have come and gone and there's a fair amount of duplicates these days
 
slm
 
 
slm
@Creek the other tactic one can take is to look for a canonical Q. We get a lot of Q's about how to parse this output getting column X etc. If you can formulate a single A that covers several Q's these can get 10k+ views over time as well.
If you haven't noticed I've put a lot of thought into trying to get this badge 8-)
 
Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to come up with THE QUESTION, I'm just curious about how everything works around here
 
slm
5:38 PM
Me neither, I like to understand the mechanics behind the whole SE site.
Sometimes ppl confuse when someone is asking about these things as if they're only aim is to get a badge or rep, it's important for some of us to understand what the Matrix is 8-)
 
He's the one
 
@strugee hey, in my defense, I actually spent plenty of time researching cows before asking that question. And after asking, as well.
 
slm
@derobert - as a witness to the day you asked that Q I can definitely vouch that we did a fair amount of research before you asked that Q.
@Creek - if it's a slow day too that can help get a Q on the track to getting 10k views
 
is there really a cow question? like qcow?
 
108
Q: What's the story behind Super Cow Powers?

derobertAs we know, apt-get has Super Cow Powers and aptitude does not: $ apt-get --help | grep -i cow This APT has Super Cow Powers. $ aptitude --help | grep -i cow This aptitude does not have Super Cow Powers. and of course, APT has an Easter egg to go with i...

 
slm
5:42 PM
I haven't looked through data.exch. but I wouldn't be surprised if there was a trend of days of the week to 10k views
shameless plug ....
 
That was fast, bookmarked I bet
 
slm
@Creek - deroberts have one of the most elusive badges to me....
 
@slm hey, he asked for it
 
slm
I figured it was your home page now when you launched your browser
 
@slm that would be interesting to look at, there might be a relationship between holidays/weekends and views
 
5:44 PM
@Creek nah, it's quick to find, I got to my profile, it's the highest-voted question I've asked.
You can see some of the research that actually went into it from the edit at the bottom, that was from going through a lot of mail archives...
 
that's funny, I figured @Gilles would have given the golden answer
 
@Creek remember that using @ pings the user and sends a message to their inbox. Don't use it unless you actually want to notify them.
 
@derobert haha. I'm sure you did :)
 
@strugee slm can vouch for me! :-)
 
@derobert :P
you should do that NTP thing!
I'll have @slm kick you so you'll have nothing better to do
 
5:50 PM
suspends @derobert for 24h
 
\o/
 
@terdon You need to do that when I'm at home goofing off via chat.
 
:)
 
@terdon flags DRUNK MOD WITH POWER... wait, is that right?
 
And of course, probably for more like 8h. You'd want me to be able to post a draft for reviews.
 
5:52 PM
@derobert you could actually just go to top voted questions. it's on page 2
@casey I wonder what would happen if I actually did that
 
@strugee you must have small pages. Its on page one here.
 
@strugee it would either get dismissed before most of us saw it, or you'd get a flurry of mods joining to see wth is going on in here
 
@derobert I've got 15 Qs per page; what do you have?
@casey haha, forgot you're a mod. on Aviation, right?
 
Earth Science, though I'll probably stand for the Aviation election when it eventually graduates
 
ah, gotcha
 
5:55 PM
@strugee 50. There is a page size selector at the bottom right, under the question list
 
that reminds me, I should check my Area 51 proposal
 
the rep just comes so easily for me on Aviation. a little over 8k and I barely try
 
@derobert gotcha
 
6:38 PM
@casey got rep? :-)
@casey they see your diamond and go weak at the knees. :-)
@casey That should be MOD DRUNK WITH POWER (patent pending).
 
Should I put the edit as a new question or is it fine if I modify as I have done now?
3
Q: calculate sum of squares using shell script in perl/awk

RameshI have 2 files as below. file1 0.34 0.27 0.32 file2 0.15 0.21 0.15 Now, I would like to calculate the sum of squares between each column. For example, [(0.34 - 0.15)^2 + (0.27 - 0.21)^2 + (0.32 - 0.15)^2 ] / 3 Where 3 is the total number of lines in the file. I will be having same numb...

 
@derobert And eating them too, no doubt.
 
 
1 hour later…
8:02 PM
Wow, I think I answered this one correctly after proper researching :)
0
A: "file" command confusing C & C++

RameshFrom man page of file command, file command actually performs 3 tests on determining the file type. First test The filesystem tests are based on examining the return from a stat(2) system call. Second test The magic number tests are used to check for files with data in ...

 
 
1 hour later…
slm
9:21 PM
@Ramesh very nice A. +1
 
@slm, thanks and thanks for the edit as well :)
 
slm
@Ramesh you did all the work 8-)
 
I believe this question doesn't belong here.
-1
Q: Learning version controlling

non-programmerI am a non-programmer but I use LaTeX to write books. Sometimes I would like to try different versions on the tex-files. What would you recommend to use as a version controlling for a tex-writer? Is it easy to learn git for my purpose?

@FaheemMitha, what about bazaar?
Have you tried that for version control?
 
@Ramesh Nope, it doesn't really. But it's also not a good question, so it shouldn't be migrated to TeX.SE.
 
@Ramesh that doesn't belong anywhere
 
9:34 PM
@derobert @Braiam, thanks. I voted to close it.
 
is just me or this guy is drinking/smoking something weird?
 
@derobert, your suggestion to modify the /etc/my.cnf is working really nice. :) Probably once the restoration is over, I will put it as a question and post your solution as the answer.
 
@Ramesh Bazaar is mostly dead. One of its developers even wrote a requiem of sorts. Which shouldn't be hard to find if you want to. It's an interesting read.
@Braiam Agreed.
@derobert Agreed.
@Ramesh Not what I had in mind, but see lwn.net/Articles/515652
 
@FaheemMitha, the best version control for me is google drive.
So easy to maintain.
No need for setting up anything.
 
@Ramesh I don't think that is version control. :-) Plus google gets to keep all your data and look through it. Maybe you should read the user agreement.
 
9:45 PM
@Ramesh huh? Google drive as VCS?
 
You're better off with a smaller outfit. These big corporations think they can do whatever they want.
@Braiam I think he's kidding.
 
@Faheem, @Briam, <http://i.stack.imgur.com/W2dk1.png>
 
@Ramesh
root@orwell:/home/faheem# apt-cache policy bzr
bzr:
Installed: 2.6.0~bzr6526-1
Candidate: 2.6.0~bzr6526-1
Version table:
2.6.0+bzr6595-1 0
50 http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian/ testing/main amd64 Packages
50 http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian/ unstable/main amd64 Packages
*** 2.6.0~bzr6526-1 0
500 http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian/ wheezy/main amd64 Packages
100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
2.1.2-1 0
500 http://debian.lcs.mit.edu/debian/ squeeze/main amd64 Packages
I think that speaks for itself...
 
@Ramesh @br<tab> FTY
 
@Ramesh Try one more time. :-)
 
9:49 PM
@FaheemMitha, it is not allowing me to edit it.
 
@Ramesh Yes, you have like 2 min.
 
@FaheemMitha, its fine. But if you see that image, google actually has version control in the side of the document. Of course, it cannot be a replacement but for small word documents and other stuffs, it is very good.
 
@Ramesh Whatever works for you, I guess.
 
10:04 PM
@Ramesh This is the article I had in mind. lwn.net/Articles/529978
Vernooij: Bazaar-NG: 7 years of hacking on a distributed version control system
 
@JosephR. hello, do you have any more suggestions as to bypassing grub
 
@ryekayo Hello to you too. The other answer suggested setting variables called "GRUB_HIDDEN_TIMEOUT*" to 0. I don't see these in my /etc/default/grub. I only see "GRUB_TIMEOUT=5" and when I look at my /boot/grub/grub.cfg I see set timeout 5 as expected. So maybe try only setting that.
 
@Ramesh you probably aren't that interested in vcs, but Facebook picked up Mercurial recently, so that really helped the Mercurial project. See
@JosephR. hey
 
Hello @FaheemMitha
:)
 
@JosephR. don't often see you in chat. How are things in Egypt?
 
10:13 PM
@slm, I see you're there too. How's that diamond coming, buddy? Are congratulations or condolences in order? :D
@FaheemMitha A bit tense I would say.
 
@JosephR. Sorry to hear that. Political stuff?
@JosephR. That would be congratulations, I think.
 
@FaheemMitha Yes. Escalating into violence at times... :(
 
@JosephR. Sounds like India.
 
@FaheemMitha :( Sectarian violence is never fun.
What's the situation like, safety-wise, for you then?
 
@JosephR. Indeed. Here, historically it is Hindus and Muslims killing each other. What variant do you have there?
@JosephR. Oh, nothing much going on right now, for me personally, anyway.
 
10:16 PM
@FaheemMitha Christians and Muslims. Also, recently, Sunna Muslims and Shiaa Muslims.
 
But India's future looks far from bright.
@JosephR. Ok
 
I just tried it
 
@JosephR. if you have some money and live in an urban area, you get to avoid the worst of India. Of course, you still have to live here...
 
didnt work either
 
@FaheemMitha It's the same in Egypt as well. Although our concept of the suburbs is very atypical of the rest of the world.
 
10:18 PM
@JosephR. How so?
 
@JosephR. that didn't work either
 
@ryekayo So what does set timeout say in /boot/grub/grub.cfg?
 
@FaheemMitha They're more like mini-urban areas now on account of the large population density and the spread of high-rise apartment buildings to accommodate it. You'd be hard pressed to find single- (or even double-) story houses with their own gardens in Cairo's "suburbs".
@ryekayo Please re-send the link and remove my name from it.
 
10:21 PM
@JosephR. I see. India might be similar. Not sure. I don't get out that much.
 
@ryekayo No worries. Why not remove the "hidden timeout" stuff altogether? And please paste what you have in /boot/grub/grub.cfg.
 
You mean comment it out?
 
@FaheemMitha Is that by personal choice?
@ryekayo Yes. Then run sudo update-grub and show us the contents of /boot/grub/grub.cfg
 
@JosephR. Is what by personal choice?
 
@FaheemMitha Your not going out that much. I mean is it a matter of personal safety or do you just not like it?
 
@JosephR. The latter, mostly. I don't feel unsafe in Bombay, but it isn't that safe either. To some extent it depends where you go, like anywhere. But I have enough things to do, and generally moving around in the city is unpleasant. Most of the people one meets are what one might term ill-favored in appearance.
 
@FaheemMitha, thanks. I will check it out.
 
I recall I was having a bad day some weeks ago, and wound up doing a fair amount of walking in South Bombay. That day I felt like a character in the Island of Dr. Moreau.
 
@JosephR. I tried a restart with the change, didnt work either
 
@FaheemMitha "... moving around the city is unpleasant... " Boy, do I hear you! I have started ditching my car whenever I can and just hoofing it or using public transportation.
 
10:27 PM
@JosephR. I see you write in your profile "Doing Linux sysadmin stuff for lack of someone better." What would something better look like? Just curious.
@JosephR. Well, I'm not sure which method is less pleasant. It all sucks in different ways. I suppose Cairo and Bombay are similar in some ways.
 
@ryekayo Hmmmm. I'm afraid this is beyond me.
Why not try fixing the GRUB2 Windows entry instead?
 
I've tried countless times
 
slm
@JosephR. overall it's been good. Still adjusting to how to balance the mod tasks w/ being able to A. Looking to get back on the A horse and do more of it this month. The last month has been slow for me.
@JosephR. - good to see you too BTW 8-)
 
I figured using EasyBCD will be easier and it has given me better results. I dont got the boot loaders freezing on any OS so far
it's just annoying to see grub on the screen lol
 
@FaheemMitha Not "something better", "someone better". By that I mean someone who is a computer techie by training. Most of what I know I picked up from the guy before me then added some reading (and tinkering) of my own.
 
10:30 PM
@JosephR. Sorry, misread.
 
It just happened that I was the most Linux-savvy guy around (which isn't saying much at all in this case) so I got stuck with the responsibility.
 
@JosephR. Ok, you mean you wound up doing that work because they couldn't find someone more suitable to do it?
 
@slm "good to see you too BTW 8-)" Whoops. Looking back on my greeting it seems that I've done no greeting at all, have I? Sorry about that. Good to see you of course.
 
@JosephR. PhD. candidate? You're a student?
 
Glad to hear the mod duties haven't been that rough.
@FaheemMitha I am.
@FaheemMitha ^ Yes, exactly because no one better could be found to do the job.
 
10:33 PM
How The U.S. Can Beat Belgium: Score More Goals
heh
 
Ah, I was expecting a last minute goal.
 
@FaheemMitha So what about you? From your other SE accounts, it seems you're in academia too. Are you a professor or a student?
 
Is this something you guys might want?
0
Q: How to get an Wacom Intuos CTH-480 to work under Easy Peasy 1.6 (Ubuntu 10.04)?

user298830Is there any way to make a Wacom Intuous CTH-480 work under Easy Peasy 1.6 (Ubuntu 10.04)? I have installed the Wacom Driver files according these instruction, replacing 3.7 with 2.6.30, as Easy Peasy 1.6 uses kernel 2.6.32-21-generic: http://matthewwittering.com/blog/ubuntu-tips/how-to-install-...

 
@FaheemMitha Sorry scratch that. I just remembered your post in meta.
 
@JosephR. Neither. :-) Technically, unemployed. Though I've been writing research papers in the last few years. Actually more successfully than when I was employed.
I hope to get a job again at some point.
 
10:38 PM
@FaheemMitha Good luck with that.
 
@JosephR. what company do you work for? Is it part time?
@JosephR. Thanks
 
@FaheemMitha I used to work part time for a small startup but I quit that to focus on my MSc thesis. I am currently solely employed by my university as a teaching assistant.
@FaheemMitha If you're referring to the sysadmin stuff, I'm doing that (almost entirely) pro bono for the research lab I work at.
@FaheemMitha So what kind of research are you pursuing now?
 
@JosephR. My current project is an applied statistics paper. In the past I've done computational biology, bioinformatics, and applied probability.
My PhD is in statistics.
@JosephR. pro bono? bummer. why?
@JosephR. as you probably know, getting published is a giant pain in the behind.
 
@FaheemMitha Interesting. A friend of mine is looking to get into the computational biology game. He's from a biology background so he approached me for advice on which scripting language he should learn to get an edge in academia. So would you recommend Perl or Python? Or something else?
@FaheemMitha "getting published is a giant pain in the behind." Yes. But networking at conferences I find really good.
@FaheemMitha Why am I doing it pro bono. Several reasons.
1) It's fun
 
@JosephR. Either Perl or Python would work to start with. Personally I prefer Python, it is a much better language. Though they are both slow. Really, none of the languages commonly used by research are really good/suitable.
 
10:51 PM
2) It's an educational experience for me in the field of computing, which I'm really interested in.
 
I've used Python + C++ in the past. It is a pain to work with. I've been looking at alternatives, but it is not easy.
And R + C++ for example is worse.
 
3) I get to help the research lab in any way I can (it's driven mainly by individual efforts as funding is quite low at this point).
 
@JosephR. Ok. Still, I think getting paid for work is important. Otherwise people tend to take advantage.
 
4) I get the gratitude of a bunch of professors who can then help me academically and provide letters of recommendation/job opportunities (both of which already happened).
 
What are you administering?
 
10:52 PM
Thanks re: the language advice.
 
@JosephR. Ok, but wouldn't they do that anyway? Or, aren't they required to do that anyway?
@JosephR. Common Lisp is a pretty nice language which is quite suitable for computational research. The only drawback is that basicall nobody uses it for this.
 
Not automatically, no.
 
I've been trying to learn it, though.
@JosephR. Well, I mean the criteria for letters of recommendation/job opportunities should not depend on you helping them with their computers.
 
I've had a brush with a remote relative of Lisp's that is being used as a proprietary scripting language for commercial software.
The syntax was not pretty!
 
I once tried to help a professor (technically two I guess) with computer stuff, but the person in question could not have been less grateful. He was a grade A asshole.
@JosephR. parens?
 
10:55 PM
@FaheemMitha Yes, I see what you mean. My point was, I got to work directly with more professors so I was able to ask them for strong recommendation letters.
Yes parens mostly :D
 
@JosephR. Ok, this came out of the computer admin work? Not sure I follow.
@JosephR. parens look scary, but they are not really. once you understand what it is about...
 
@FaheemMitha Well, not exactly. I also maintain the simulation software and have often used my time to help younger research assistants with the experience I gained in the industrial sector in my field of study.
 
@JosephR. Ok, I see.
 
The points I listed are in retrospect.
 
@JosephR. Right. At the time you were just trying to be helpful?
 
10:58 PM
The real reason I agreed to the job to begin with is that the lab is driven by individual efforts as I've told you so everyone pitches in as they are able.
So how did you deal with that professor of yours?
I often fantasize about leaving behind destructive worms/trojans/... for people like that.
The thing is, you know they'll jump straight to blaming the IT guy, so I can't turn thought into action :D
 
@JosephR. I didn't. I eventually left. Well, my contract was not renewed. But I gradually became less and less keen on doing the work. I think in the last 6 months I mostly just went into maintenance mode. Once I knew my contract was not being renewed, in some cases I just refused to do stuff.
@JosephR. Yes, I thought of stuff like that, but it would have hurt the guys research group, who hadn't done anything to me. Plus, it would have been criminal, and I'm not a criminal.
 
@FaheemMitha There's IT work for you. :( I sometimes hate how it's mostly thankless.
I sometimes find myself wanting to shout " 'my computer is slow' is not a legitimate complaint!"
^Neither am I, so the annoying ones go unpunished :(
 
@JosephR. “my computer is slow” is a totally legitimate complaint!
 
@JosephR. I hadn't been hired as a computer person, so there was really nothing this guy could do. He couldn't give me a bad ref as a computer person.
 
I once closed the browser for a guy who was being annoying on purpose and rigged it up to say "Sorry your browser went on vacation" whenever he tried to start it again.
 
11:06 PM
I was just trying to help the guy out because (initially) he seemed nice, and I was grateful he had given me a job. Bad move. He turned out to be a real psycho. But that's what you get for trusting people.
@JosephR. :-)
@JosephR. Yes, it can be really thankless work. Just be sure those people appreciate it, and aren't taking advantage of you. In hindsight I wish I'd just done things that helped me.
I've never found counting on people's appreciation has worked well for me, but I've probably not been around the nicest people.
 
@Gilles I see your point. But when a user starts a resource-intensive simulation and then comes to complain about their computer not being responsive, it gets old quickly...
@Gilles Hey, I noticed you're a LotR/Tolkien fan from your posts on Scifi.SE. Always glad to meet a fellow fan :)
 
11:54 PM
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Q: Strip color on OS X with BSD sed (or any other tool)

iconoclastI'm on OS X, which has a BSD version of sed (which I'm guessing is inferior to a GNU version on Linux), and all the techniques for removing color on commandlinefu.com did not work. I tried replacing the -r switch (non-existent on OS X) -e, but that didn't help. Is there some reliable way I can ...

I remember posting a script (probably using sed or perl) that stripped color escape sequences
I can't find it
There's unix.stackexchange.com/questions/4527/… but the only sed solution there uses GNU sed
 

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