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01:15
@ScottPack Sorry Scott. We're required to report you now...
:)
For what? I was referring to @RoryAlsop.
@ScottPack You're putting little Rory down? Now we really need to report it....
Well, on the plus side, this hole I dug myself proves my shovel is in good working order for the start of gardening season.
01:33
@ScottPack Hole? To bury your euthanized child?
 
6 hours later…
07:47
@ScottPack :-)
@ScottPack NVD says - CVSS v2 Base Score:7.8, Impact Subscore: 7.8, Exploitability Subscore: 8.6
 
4 hours later…
11:30
Yeah, I noticed that too.
I couldn't add them up in any way and get the 13 odd number.
Morning Gents.
@ScottPack ello
LOL - the global ubiquity of cockney dialect :-)
According to popular media there are precisely 2 English accents: Cockney and Received
hahahaha - that'll please the Brummies, Scousers, Weegies, Cheuchters et al no end
11:39
Wow, ok, I have no freaking clue what you just said
Hm. This past weekend you had both the summer time switch and the infinity length commute. How did that go?
well the summertime switch seemed to help the kids stay in bed until a reasonable hour, but the commute was 2 hours longer than it should have been because of delays on planes and trains. Meh
Brummies - folks from Birmingham, in the English midlands - very distinctive accent
Scousers - from Liverpool
Weegies - Glasgow
Cheuchter - middle Scottish
very different accents - mine is a combination of RP and Edinburgh scottish
Then there's you people from the City. Put your pinky down!
oi. Travel time. bbiab
12:16
I was just about to refer to you as Midlothian, but then thought to check the maps.
technically speaking I'm an Orcadian, but referred to as a Ferrylouper cheuchter :-)
meaning someone who went south across the water to central Scotland, ending up in West Lothian
Before you came to civilization, sure.
absolutely
When we were in Curry a few years ago, the male of the couple we stayed with, had grown up on one of the Western islands.
Can't remember which one.
That was a very depressing morning as he told us about it, and why as a 19 year old he left.
Well, the western isles are a tad bleak, and even Orkney (which I do love) is more a place for growing up and retiring than doing anything exciting in the middle
At least Orkney isn't as restrictive and insular as the western isles
12:23
My memory indicates he had to learn English before coming over, but that might be incorrect.
ahh - one of those 2 islands. Very gaelic.
I'm actually glad the weather was poor that morning. It gave us a chance to sit and chat with them. Very interesting fellow, but yeah, sounded all a bit depressing.
 
3 hours later…
15:19
just found this: genius! end result, spilled coca cola on my desk :-)
4352
A: RegEx match open tags except XHTML self-contained tags

bobinceYou can't parse [X]HTML with regex. Because HTML can't be parsed by regex. Regex is not a tool that can be used to correctly parse HTML. As I have answered in HTML-and-regex questions here so many times before, the use of regex will not allow you to consume HTML. Regular expressions are a tool th...

15:34
I've seen that one before, me thinks.
While that one encourages amusing memories of the Old Ones, this one is suitably snarky.
395
A: RegEx match open tags except XHTML self-contained tags

Kaitlin Duck SherwoodWhile it is true that asking regexes to parse arbitrary HTML is like asking Paris Hilton to write an operating system, it's sometimes appropriate to parse a limited, known set of HTML. If you have a small set of HTML pages that you want to scrape data from and then stuff into a database, regex...

@ScottPack Yep - somehow I had missed that whole piece. So it amused me during lunch today
Speaking of lunch, it's about that time.
along with the memes thread on meta se
linkages?
111
Q: The Many Memes of Meta

TheTXIThe term "Internet Meme" is used to describe a catchphrase or concept that spreads quickly from person to person via the Internet (see: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meme_(Internet) for more details) Stack Overflow and now even more predominantly Meta Stack Overflow has seen more than its fair share of ...

15:42
So what's up with this whole 'Jon Skeet' thing?
isn't he "the dude"?
He wears jellies, writes cheques for <$1 and smokes a lot of pot?
If there's one thing I know and respect, it's the Lebowski.
we are nihilists - we believe in nothing
15:46
I think they used "nothing" instead of "anything". That might require some, ahem, fact checking :)
@RoryAlsop That's a pretty sophisticated attack on your desk!
@nealmcb Social engineering at it's most subtle!
@ScottPack like that, you mean:-)
@nealmcb yup
Zalgo comes and dirties my desk
@RoryAlsop More like scheduling a time to painstakingly review the footage.
need to check bandwidth at my hotel - I feel the Dude requires space on my hard drive
16:39
I should attempt a white russian sometime.
17:24
Don't you just love it when one of your less-often used accounts' passwords expire, and then the only way you find out is after waiting 1.5+ hours for a tool to finish its job only to see in the report that your credentials failed?
Then, you have to call the help desk to get the account unlocked (because of course, the tool doesn't know how to stop before the threshold is hit) and change the password like you should have done a week ago, and then wait another 1.5+ hours for the tool to run again!
For some reason, today feels like Monday.
Or you change your password on the server, but not your saved credentials for email on at least one of -- phone, laptop, desktop, and home desktop.
17:58
@ScottPack yes, yes you should!
Posted by Matt Sherman on March 30th, 2011

In our continuing effort to allow awesome developers to demonstrate their …awesomeness… we’ve added the ability to include your GitHub projects on your Careers 2.0 profile.

The feature is inspired by a sentiment widely shared among developers and employers: show me. As John Resig put it:

The process is easy. Head over to your Careers 2.0 profile, and look for the cute little GitHub guy:

…and two clicks later, your GitHub awesome becomes part of your Careers 2.0 awesome – complete with language tags and time span. We give you the opportunity to explain your work, too. …

I think I got ruined on the notion back in college for having, what I think was, Khaluha and coffee once.
kahlua is one of the staples in my spirits cupboard
along with various rums, baileys, absinthe, creme de cassis.......etc
I miss working in a cocktail bar
Other than wine and beer I tend to just keep Emmet's and (scotch|bourbon)
mmmmm - whisky
18:00
I don't much care for the taste of Baileys. Too sweet.
in the student area I'm currently staying in they do cans of Jack Daniels and coke
for £2
Not too shabby
after dinner I plan JD&coke and a pack of Pringles crisps
I am real keen on a nice Sailor Jerry and coke
yep - works for me
18:03
That's some good spiced rum right there.
Yummo.
I don't know why, but spiced rum is my drink of choice for winter.
Mulled cider with spiced rum? Now that's an excellent afternoon.
One of the great traditions from back home is the Bride's Cog - orkneyjar.com/tradition/weddings/wedding4.htm - I especially like the quote: "The Orcadian guests still watch with a wry smile as an unsuspecting incomer gulps down great mouthfuls of cog, blissfully unaware of the consequences of their actions."
It has various recipes, but the one we had at our wedding was basically mulled spirits
:-)
I presume it's some kind of grog that has a very low freezing point, but doesn't taste like it?
it is usually made from spirits available in normal off-licence's (as Orkney's traditional brew is whisky - the Highland Park and the Scapa are our two distilleries)
we don't have akvavit like they have in Denmark
Or ouzo
18:19
or Kaersk in Norway, or Pisco in Chile - everywhere seems to have something awful that warms you up. I like the countries that do nice drinks (rum, whisky etc)
19:04
Urgh. Finally that scan is done and I can go back to the office.
I wonder, does your guys' discussion of various liquors above count as "food"?
I would consider it food, yes.
@RoryAlsop Except for poverty, rampant racism, fiddling, and barefoot tapdancing, this is about the closest thing that my people have to unique culture.
It's food, so it should be on-topic here.
19:41
I should start wearing earplugs when I go to that server room. Fan noise has got my tinnitus flared up again.
19:55
What?
@ScottPack - ooo, that looks nice!
Yeah, good stuff.
My mother's people came from the Tennessee mountains. I have fond memories of visiting my grandmother and her always having one of those ready when we arrived.
There is an "American" restaurant in Edinburgh - but I don't know whether it is region independent. Will have to have a look
I would absolutely love to receive a report.
I know how much we totally fuck up ethnic foods. Should be fun to see what ours turns out to be.
I suppose it shouldn't surprise me that other countries have "American" restaurants, just the same as we have <Insert Culture Here> restaurants. But, for some reason, it does.
20:09
I mean we have Old Orleans - southern restaurant chain that doesn't appear to be that close to the real thing
And then of course we have the spawn of satan - McDonalds
And PizzaHut
I'm embarrassed to say that while in Edinburgh, we actually ate at an Applebees.
We were starving for dinner, and couldn't find anything that served food!
Every place we found turned out to be a "pub" that stopped selling food at 3pm, pulled out all the tables, and turned into an American bar.
there is an Applebees?
I did eat at a nice one in Cleveland once
I thought it was an Applebees
If you're ever in Cleveland again let me know. My in-laws are up there. I'll see if we can work something out so I can buy you a beer.
Looks like it was a Friday's.
20:37
ahhh - the classic TGI Fridays :-)
On the plus side, I was able to get a Stella.
Probably the best beer I managed to find in that town.
While being on our own and just wondering around the city and country side was fun, having someone tell us where to go would have definitely been useful.
20:58
@ScottPack Stella :-) That's a lager...Edinburgh is a good city for proper Real Ale
well if you make it over here again, let me know in advance and I'll sort out a tour/suitable locations
it does help
Based on the places I wandered into I had an option of Bud Lite or Stella.
Like I said, not knowing where to go :)
I think that's why I had such a crap time in New York - was there with a client and no-one to see the sights with
We've talked about traveling again. Definitely a lot harder now.
yeah - I hear you with that. travel with 3 kids is way too expensive
I'll bet.
We flew down to see my folks, just with the one kid. That felt like it almost broke us.
21:02
heh
Of course, the downside is that it's a 15 hour drive. Without the child padding.
Quittin time. Evening gents.
And @Iszi.
Have a good one
@ScottPack Not far behind. L8rz
Eeeww... sounds like I'll be driving into some nasty rain & hail.
I can hear it coming now too. Better get while the gettin's good. L8r @RoryAlsop.
 
1 hour later…
22:39
Well, looks like I missed the hail but the rain was pretty harsh for a bit there.
Starting a few months early, eh?

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