<daviid>OrangeShark: yes, it really would be nice, and I think we'll get there, maybe not tomorrow, but we'll get there <OrangeShark>It is kind of interesting that in my area of work, the competition use languages like common lisp and prolog <daviid>OrangeShark: I recommend savannah for guile-git, a better choice for such an essential binding, imo <daviid>OrangeShark: what is your area of work? <OrangeShark>daviid: yeah, the whole mailing list workflow is interesting to me, but for some reason it does pose a challenge for some. <daviid>so google and hp uses common lisp then <daviid>OrangeShark: for guile-git, I think to be on savannah is a lot more important (and it could become a gnu package) then the work flow ... and it's not like it was guix, your are two to take care of it right now ... and, if you use a email workflow, we can follow it (I'll never evercreate a github account, and will never ever use a web based workflow (and it has nothing to do with my age :):)) <daviid>if i didn't think google shold just disapear from the planet, i'd apply :) <daviid>but it is such a bad company, no way, i'd rather die <daviid>OrangeShark: are you working reote as well? (just curious) <OrangeShark>daviid: I will be sure to evaluate savannah as an option, I have nothing against email based workflow, I think it does have some nice pros for a workflow <daviid>imo, free s/w should (first) be o savannah, for these, savannah is the place to be, imo noteabug is cool for personal projects, such as our own file configs ... but guile-git, essential to guix itself, really it should be on savannah, but then it's only my opinion ... <OrangeShark>but I can see why someone would pick common lisp or prolog to solve this problem, sort of a natural fit <daviid>OrangeShark: I hope yu can convince your boss then :) <daviid>oh! let's get together to guile scheme this world then :) <daviid>to many snakes, that can't be good right? haha <cmaloney>daviid: United Shore Financial Service was the company that was using Scheme <daviid>cmaloney: thanks! oh too bad, but maybe if they hire me that can chang (just joking of course) <daviid>yep, non human, not being ... another planetarian disaster ... <daviid>spk121: do you have channel priviledge? to set it to r+ or +r I don't remember ... <fkz>With our IRC ad service you can reach a global audience of entrepreneurs and fentanyl addicts with extraordinary engagement rates! https://williampitcock.com/ <idn>With our IRC ad service you can reach a global audience of entrepreneurs and fentanyl addicts with extraordinary engagement rates! https://williampitcock.com/ <mbuf>Need to use +r mode in this channel. Any ops around? <was>With our IRC ad service you can reach a global audience of entrepreneurs and fentanyl addicts with extraordinary engagement rates! https://williampitcock.com/ <wingo>mbuf: what would setting the channel to +r do? <mbuf>wingo, allow only registered users to freenode <wingo>ok let's give it a try for a few hours then <mbuf>wingo, might want to send an e-mail to the list asking people to register on freenode? <mbuf>wingo, /msg NickServ REGISTER password e-mail <wingo>mbuf: good idea :) want to send that mail? :) <amz31>done via my gmail account because I lost access to the @hypermove.net account <amz31>wingo: did you submit something for scheme 2018? <wingo>no, i knew i wouldn't have time to travel this year <amz31>I have an C API that as a concept of future struct, you can attach the continuation to it when it resolves to something <amz31>the callback is called at somepoint in a thread called the network thread <amz31>how can I schedule a fiber from the other thread? <wingo>use spawn-fiber with #:sched, passing the thread's scheduler as arg; <wingo>or send a thunk over a channel <megane>< wasamasa> <mquin> marja: "+q $~a" will mute unidentified users ***berndj-blackout is now known as berndj
<ng0>spam everywhere else already for hours.. <ng0>did you read about where it comes from? insecure home routers apparently. <ng0>"In 2018, there was a resurgence of IRC spam attacks that were undetected by traditional proxy scanning methods. This is because the attackers were using vulnerable SSH daemons running on routers, IPMI devices and other embedded devices to proxy the connections, using the direct-tcpip subsystem." <daviid>pip3 install ... scnakes again! :) let's write all this in guile folks! <ng0>but no technical information. sorry <OrangeShark>the computing field really needs to get better at security...