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00:22
@Cerberus Did you know that “Zaragoza”, the city in Aragon, is a corruption of Caesar Augusta? I must have known that before, and only just now noticed it again.
 
2 hours later…
02:05
@tchrist Oh, that funny. Makes sense, though.
02:57
@tchrist China had movable type before Europe did.
03:18
@Mr.ShinyandNew安宇 yeah? I know they had wood cuts first.
does that count?
brb custard
@cornbreadninja麵包忍者 Ouch, that sounds SO MUCH worse than a paper cut.
03:45
Good evening.
Hello Mah.
Hi David! How are things?
@DavidWallace LOL
mmmmcustard
Ooh, I HATE custard. But that might be because of my sister.
Ugh, I have surgery on Tuesday.
hides in hidey-sack
03:57
Ooh dear. I hope it's nothing serious.
@DavidWallace what?
@Mahnax WHAT?
Toenails are ingrown.
It's no longer manageable.
My sister loved custard. When we were kids, whenever we had custard, she would make a big show of being as disgusting as possible while eating it. Making sure everyone could see when she had a mouthful of custard, and displaying it on her tongue. It has put me off custard for life.
@Mahnax owieeeee
@DavidWallace say no more! Sheesh.
I still remember being made fun of after saying "Mum, Catherine's flaunting her custard again", on one occasion.
04:00
I wore a pair of cheap earrings a long time ago, and one of them became infected. My ear eventually grew over the earring back.
But it seemed like the right verb at the time.
@cornbreadninja麵包忍者 Ooh, so you have metal inside your ear?
@cornbreadninja麵包忍者 Oh no!
I had it removed, and a single stitch installed.
I'm on antibiotics for my toes, but they don't help.
@Mahnax I bet they help more than you can imagine.
04:01
@Mahnax :x
I hope they get better very soon.
@DavidWallace I was just put on them a week ago. So far, they haven't done anything noticeable.
@cornbreadninja麵包忍者 Well, this surgery is [purportedly] a long-term solution.
So where is the Control Mahnax for comparison?
@DavidWallace Fortunately, there is only one Mahnax.
I'm not sure that this world could handle two.
Well, good luck with the surgery, regardless of whether the antibiotics are helping.
I occasionally have problems with my toenails too, so you have my sympathy.
Thanks. I'm really hoping it solves this, because after two years of bad toenails, I'm a little sick of them.
04:21
Hello. Does anyone know what all fall under <em>Personal Technology</em>? Computers and Gadgets for sure. How about Auto (bikes & cars)?
Not usually, no.
Mostly it means laptops, cellphones, MP3 players, iPads and related stuff. Not motorbikes or cars.
04:39
And Jarvik-7 artificial hearts.
@DavidWallace Thought so. Just wanted to be sure.
Thanks!
@cornbreadninja麵包忍者 You what?
Robert Koffler Jarvik, M.D. (born May 11, 1946) is an American scientist, researcher and entrepreneur known for his role in developing the Jarvik-7 artificial heart. Early life Robert Jarvik was born in Midland, Michigan to Norman Eugene Jarvik and Edythe Koffler Jarvik, and raised in Stamford, Connecticut. He is the nephew of Murray Jarvik, a pharmacologist who was the co-inventor of the nicotine patch. Jarvik is a graduate of Syracuse University. He earned a master’s degree in medical engineering from New York University. Career After being admitted to the University of Utah School o...
That's pretty personal.
I must go to bed.
 
1 hour later…
05:52
what is the form of "must" in the past]
@pourjour Must. It is the same as the present.
Now it's bed time, bye!
@Cerberus bye
@Cerberus even in the reported speech
@pourjour Sure.
You can use had to if you want to avoid past must.
Bye!
@Cerberus ok, thanks have a good night
poof
06:11
guys
does it make sense? "This is a question driven by curiosity"
ok I am freaking hungry. BRB!
 
2 hours later…
08:01
0
Q: How MySQL blob actually works?

TemporaryNickNameThis is a question driven by curiosity. I am learning Oracle database and Oracle database handles Blob data in a separate tablespace, which I believe reduces overhead while trying to read large Blob data. I am wondering how MySQL handles Blob? I am actually planning to start a project and I wish ...

 
2 hours later…
10:09
@TemporaryNickName In the sense that curiosity was the "motive force" that made the question appear, then yes (eg, a car is driven by its engine). It's interesting that someone can be driven to ask a question [again by curiosity] but that means compelled, which isn't quite what driven means here.
anyone
home i need hlep
@AndrewLeach
@Saladin I'm not going to be here for much longer, but if you say what the problem is someone will help when they're in (if I can't in the meantime).
10:37
@AndrewLeach
u gone
i just need quick help
@Robusto
Just about to go: but you still haven't said what the issue is. Just post that. Someone will answer.
Hey ask the question man, asking to ask is recursive :D
haha
how much of your monthly income is used to support your family member and other dependents?
if such a question is asked in visa application forum
and i want to say that I don't give any money to my family for support as they function like self-independent in terms of money
how can i write it nicely..
You could say you have no-one dependent on you financially.
sounds nice...
okay i will write this
10:41
Just don't blame me if they don't like it.
lololol
i mean with 35.5 K score
it should work
or just make it short and simple: 0%?
They may say "But you have family living with you: you must spend something on them"
no idea if they are looking for nice
yes
but they have enough money of their own
i just give them out of love not out of dependability
10:48
It's possible the visa question is attempting to glean information on whether you will work and send money out of the country, back home. In which case, saying that you have no financial dependents will answer the question and provide the data required. (You have no incentive to work and won't be sending money out of the country)
@Saladin what score?
I'm asked this question in the section which deals with the financial requirements regarding my trip to uk
exactly its regarding UK visa
xcx
xcx
does 'Data streaming Flow' sounds correct for a diagram describing an architecture, of financial messages flow?
or there is too many words
I mean synonyms
'stream' and 'flow'
need to pick one I think :)
> financial message(s) flow
xcx
xcx
11:02
Data Streaming schema Vs Data Flow schema
@JohanLarsson hmm yes
I don't know English much but that sounded better to me
xcx
xcx
I prefer message flow over data flow, because 'data flow' is a common word for diagrams
but maybe wait for the guys who know the language to wake up :D
xcx
xcx
hehe thx, nvm, that's good
@cornbreadninja麵包忍者 You are a veritable fount.
Å, I have that one on my Swedish keyboard, not identical, also Ä
It’s satire.
Yes.
ok had me fooled, not hard :D
11:55
> Å, I have that one on my Swedish keyboard, not identical, also Ä
> \N{U+C5}, I have that one on my Swedish keyboard, not identical, also \N{U+C4}
> \N{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE}, I have that one on my Swedish keyboard, not identical, also \N{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH DIAERESIS}
That’s in NFC. In NFD, it’s. . .
> A\N{COMBINING RING ABOVE}, I have that one on my Swedish keyboard, not identical, also A\N{COMBINING DIAERESIS}
> A\x{30A}, I have that one on my Swedish keyboard, not identical, also A\x{308}
@cornbreadninja麵包忍者 Found something on the rock ‘n’ roll or ‘tisn’t here.
don't understand much now
I’m showing the code points that correspond to what you wrote.
The things in \N{...} are escapes that spell out just which code points we’re talking about here.
NFC = the composed normalization form, NFD = the decomposed normalization form
What about Tex?
looked like Tex syntax
12:01
Oh.
No, that’s from programming languages.
Perl and Java and Python and I forget what else. Dialects vary a bit.
For example, with Java you can use \x{....} in regexes but not elsewhere. To use \N{...} you need the ICU regex package.
The \N{...} escape means a named character.
The thing inside the \N{XXX} there is supposed to be the character whose Unicode NAME=XXX property is the XXX.
regexr.com?34r6m looks like it matches without voodoo?
So \N{LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH RING ABOVE} is Unicode U+00C5.
@JohanLarsson What’s that?
I don’t understand.
Oh, these escapes are so you can enter things in pure ASCII if you want.
Also, “without voodoo” is a bit off. You need normalization to do things properly.
You don’t have to use escapes provided that you can have Unicode literals.
It depends on the default — or current — encoding of the source unit being compiled.
The escapes are for program strings, not for incoming data.
ok you are way above my level, as always :D
12:09
If you set a variable to the value "\xCFngstrom", the compiler would swap in an Å there without you having to worry about (read: declare) whether your source is in ASCII or ISO-8859-1 or UTF-8 or UTF-16BE or whatnot.
It’s a way to a normal keyboard for indirect data entry of non-ASCII.
That’s all.
ty sir
got to walk puppy
12:25
@Cerberus Thinking of you with these:
12:45
Do you use a qwerty keyboard?
Yes.
13:05
Why are acknowledgements first in books? Most people must skip them and the should be last imo.
13:56
@tchrist Nice. You're reading New Greek?
@JohanLarsson Agreed.
@Cerberus No, just typography articles.
In Greek!
I had no idea they wrote para like that btw.
As to the Latin signs, I have never seen those exact forms, but they resemble abbreviations that I would transcribe as quod and pro, respectively.
14:26
@Cerberus Well, the article, as it were, was in English. It’s from this posting regarding a “Questionnaire about the needs of Greek typography end-users”. It’s generally of high quality, and includes responses from accomplished type designers.
Some of the specimens (hm, specimina?) posted or linked to are really neat.
Yes, specimina.
> the advantages of serifs for legibility are well-known.
At last!
What do you mean? Was there some question about the truth of the assertion?
That one’s pretty liggy.
@tchrist Only 99 % of websites on the Internet?
@Cerberus You mean 99% of the discussions about this, or 99% of the actual faces used on websites?
The latter.
14:31
I don’t know what I think about the blackletter Greek faces there.
@Cerberus Ah. Yes. It really depends.
I’m not sufficiently accustomed to reading blackletter faces in any language to have a sound aesthetic instinct concerning them.
Does serifs really enhance reading speed? I read somewhere it was mostly a matter of what you are used to.
Since the web for the most part does not permit kerning, and most seriffed faces require it to look right when set, it is perhaps easier to reach for a low-seriffed face that can be legible.
Letters like l give me the most trouble.
but we read words not letters right?
I used to think the name of the website was Linkedln.
14:35
@JohanLarsson Consider then how few sans examples of printed books there are.
That's LINKEDLN.
What are we using here again by default? I forget.
@JohanLarsson Only to some extent, and the larger "image" you have of a word is determined by the letters that are in it.
@tchrist font-family: Verdana,Arial,sans-serif;
14:37
@tchrist ok you have a point of course. Dunno if the difference is huge though. Probably bigger difference for longer lines.
It should be clear that the seriffed version in the second row of my most recently posted image is much easier to read than the starkly unseriffed first row, in my never-so-humble opinion.
@AndrewLeach That would be the problem then.
@tchrist Just use Firebug and change it.
@AndrewLeach Doesn’t work on my platform, right? I generally use Safari on Darwin, although sometimes I use Opera.
I assume this is another interceptor.
@tchrist Windows does have one advantage then :-)
Unproven.
14:45
@tchrist Yes. It allows pages to re-written on the fly (and Javascript stepped through and debugged).
One of these days I’m going to remap fricking Arial altogether.
what's wrong with arial? >_>
@JourneymanGeek What does “>_>” indicate as an emoticon?
Looking shifty?
slight confusion/looking shifty
Ah.
“What’s wrong with Arial?” Really?
14:48
I believe serifs made for easier printing/seperation for printing
@tchrist: it was my default font for ages, until I found a few other nice sans serif fonts
Serifs are derived from chiselled ends in sculpted letters.
as a dyslexic, they are a lot easier to read
Well, Helvetica is better than Arial by a long shot, and you should certainly look at Myriad Pro.
right now, I use source/source code pro mostly
and one of the new ms fonts, calibri I think
@JourneymanGeek I don’t know what that is.
I use arial unicode for tamil since its installed on most of my systems and does tamil ;
Arial Unicode is really buggy, one of the worst possible Unicode fonts.
@JourneymanGeek That looks good for dyslexics.
@tchrist: works for me
@AndrewLeach: source code pro is fantastic
14:56
Arial is derived from a Monotype/Stephenson Blake Grotesque, but without the quirks and character.
@JourneymanGeek What, you want something without an italic or a bold weight? Really?
@tchrist: we don't use either in tamil
In that case, its a reliable, pretty ubiquitous unicode font, that supports one language I deal with a lot, well enough
@JourneymanGeek I think you and I have different notions of what “reliable” means.
@tchrist: I've never had trouble rendering unicode in tamil on the font.

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