--- Log opened Fri Jun 05 00:00:32 2015 00:01 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Read error: Connection reset by peer] 00:02 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 00:09 -!- juri__ [~juri@pool-72-83-63-96.washdc.east.verizon.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 244 seconds] 00:10 -!- juri_ [~juri@pool-72-83-63-128.washdc.east.verizon.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 00:22 -!- PatrickRobotham [uid18270@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-qqlupcbihowdpkuc] has joined ##hplusroadmap 01:47 < juul> sheena: i think you should default assume that all public channels are logged and searchable 02:30 -!- PatrickRobotham [uid18270@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-qqlupcbihowdpkuc] has quit [Quit: Connection closed for inactivity] 02:41 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 245 seconds] 02:45 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 03:15 -!- drewbot [~cinch@ec2-23-23-38-230.compute-1.amazonaws.com] has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 03:16 -!- drewbot [~cinch@ec2-54-204-252-120.compute-1.amazonaws.com] has joined ##hplusroadmap 03:19 -!- chris_99 [~chris_99@unaffiliated/chris-99/x-3062929] has joined ##hplusroadmap 03:26 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 276 seconds] 03:26 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 03:39 -!- CaptHindsight [~2020@unaffiliated/capthindsight] has quit [Ping timeout: 276 seconds] 03:48 -!- zadock [~outsider@cthulhu.tuiasi.ro] has quit [Quit: Leaving] 03:49 -!- CaptHindsight [~2020@unaffiliated/capthindsight] has joined ##hplusroadmap 04:04 -!- jdolan_ [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 04:05 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 256 seconds] 04:06 -!- CheckDavid [uid14990@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-fljcupyacozwpolq] has joined ##hplusroadmap 04:14 -!- PatrickRobotham [uid18270@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-lfcwrlshtmusustd] has joined ##hplusroadmap 04:30 -!- Viper168 [~Viper@unaffiliated/viper168] has quit [Ping timeout: 272 seconds] 04:36 -!- Beatzebub [~beatzebub@d75-155-236-222.bchsia.telus.net] has quit [Quit: Beatzebub] 04:37 -!- Viper168 [~Viper@unaffiliated/viper168] has joined ##hplusroadmap 04:39 -!- jdolan_ [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 04:39 < wrldpc> What happened to Austen Heinz? Has that been revealed? 04:39 < wrldpc> with all due respect. 04:39 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 04:45 -!- jdolan_ [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 04:46 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 258 seconds] 04:53 -!- Madplatypus [uid19957@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-unwubcwaskgxjrqr] has quit [Quit: Connection closed for inactivity] 04:59 -!- jdolan_ [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 252 seconds] 05:01 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 05:10 -!- wrldpc [~ben@214.131.169.216.client.dyn.strong-sf94.as22781.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 272 seconds] 05:11 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 244 seconds] 05:12 -!- Zinglon [~Zinglon@ip565f6f48.direct-adsl.nl] has joined ##hplusroadmap 05:12 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 05:20 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [] 05:20 -!- narwh4l [~michael@unaffiliated/thesnark] has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 05:26 -!- zadock [~outsider@81.180.210.87] has joined ##hplusroadmap 05:31 -!- eudoxia [~eudoxia@r167-57-153-57.dialup.adsl.anteldata.net.uy] has joined ##hplusroadmap 06:01 -!- justanotheruser [~Justan@unaffiliated/justanotheruser] has quit [Ping timeout: 264 seconds] 06:02 -!- justanotheruser [~Justan@c-24-14-170-242.hsd1.in.comcast.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 06:02 -!- justanotheruser [~Justan@c-24-14-170-242.hsd1.in.comcast.net] has quit [Changing host] 06:02 -!- justanotheruser [~Justan@unaffiliated/justanotheruser] has joined ##hplusroadmap 06:45 -!- HEx1 [~HEx@hexwab.plus.com] has quit [Ping timeout: 264 seconds] 06:50 < JayDugger> Good morning, everyone. 06:51 < kanzure> indeed 06:52 < eudoxia> it is rather a good morning 06:52 < archels> that is an oxymoron 06:53 < kanzure> if i had to send someone 100 million years into the future, who the hell should it be 06:55 < JayDugger> ooh! I have plenty of candidates. Just promise me you'll aim for hard vacuum. 06:55 < archels> make sure you send them to an evening, maybe late afternoon 06:55 < archels> unless you hate them really hard, which I guess is implied here 06:56 < eudoxia> kanzure: that depends on whether or not they can carry something to record what they find 06:58 < JayDugger> Oh, yes. Plenty of empty space between the ears. 06:59 < JayDugger> None of them have learned to remember to check their watch when they encounter a fault, but I haven't tried electric shocks yet. Get the release forms in order, and you're probably set. 07:09 -!- punsieve [~drandomtu@173-170-176-33.res.bhn.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 07:14 < kanzure> all of those answers are awful 07:14 < kanzure> i need a specific person 07:21 < JayDugger> You ask as if you can do it. What did you expect? 07:21 < kanzure> i am reasonably confident 07:22 < JayDugger> At a rate of more than 1 year traveled per year experienced? 07:22 < kanzure> no :-) 07:22 < JayDugger> Well, work on that, and I'll volunteer for the second trip. 07:23 < kanzure> perhaps i'll just send someone forward far enough to find a backwards time machine 07:23 < JayDugger> First thing you should do with a time machine? Find a better one. 07:23 < JayDugger> Second thing you should do with a time machine? Destroy all the other time machines. 07:24 < kanzure> you also have to fix all the causality faults 07:25 < JayDugger> Nah, that's a myth. You can spend your time traveling keeping history on track through the rivers of tears of oceans of blood, sure. Plenty do that. 07:26 < JayDugger> It's much more interesting in principle to fork history into what ever you please. I imagine that seductive idea provides the cobblestones for a lot of well-paved roads to various private hells. 07:31 < kanzure> perhaps it will be an essay contest, k-pax style 07:31 < kanzure> "i should get to go to the future because ...." 07:32 < JayDugger> "...conquering the world will be much easier with firearms. Yrs., Alexander of Macedonia." 07:32 < JayDugger> Why not open up the contest to everyone everywhen? 07:33 < kanzure> what? 07:33 < JayDugger> If you've got a time machine for a prize, why not open up the contest to people in your past? 07:34 < JayDugger> Unless it's a one-way box. 07:34 < kanzure> uh because i don't know how to go backwards 07:34 < kanzure> it's one-way. 07:34 < JayDugger> Oh, never mind. 07:35 < eudoxia> why 100 million years? why not closer to the heat death? at that point whatever you send is likely to get picked up as people will be hoovering up any bits of energy they can find 07:36 < juul> I can has upvote? https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9665633 07:37 < chris_99> upboated 07:37 < kanzure> juul: sending people directly to your post to upvote is something that triggers the spam filterz apparently 07:37 < chris_99> oh yeah 07:37 < chris_99> darn 07:37 < kanzure> eudoxia: heat death is less useful in my opinion, what are you going to do, float around as a pile of leptrons? 07:38 < eudoxia> kanzure: i said closer, just when posthumans are starting to hunker down in bunkers of protons for the long night 07:39 < eudoxia> but not when all protons have decayed 07:39 < kanzure> i think it would be interesting to set the chronometer for sometime when the earth still exists 07:39 < juul> ach 07:42 < kanzure> also the mechanism of travel requires a facility a few kilometers under the bottom of the ocean 07:47 < JayDugger> Two FIXMEs before I volunteer for the second Janus mission. 07:47 < JayDugger> 1) faster rate, 2) secret underground base underwater 07:47 < kanzure> can't do #1 07:48 < kanzure> although the subjective time should be zero, does that count? 07:49 < JayDugger> Fine, so long as it doesn't involve some inconvenient dodge, like being not-alive. 07:53 -!- redlegion is now known as RichardNixon 07:53 -!- RichardNixon is now known as redlegion 07:54 -!- erasmus [~esb@unaffiliated/erasmus] has joined ##hplusroadmap 07:59 -!- punsieve [~drandomtu@173-170-176-33.res.bhn.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 264 seconds] 08:09 -!- erasmus [~esb@unaffiliated/erasmus] has quit [Quit: Namaste] 09:04 < kanzure> lexical fitness testing http://faculty.hampshire.edu/lspector/pubs/virtual_witches_and_warlocks.pdf 09:13 -!- nmz787_i [~ntmccork@192.55.54.36] has joined ##hplusroadmap 09:22 -!- punsieve [~drandomtu@173-170-176-33.res.bhn.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 09:31 -!- nmz787_i [~ntmccork@192.55.54.36] has quit [Quit: Leaving.] 09:44 -!- nmz787_i [~ntmccork@134.134.137.73] has joined ##hplusroadmap 09:55 -!- punsieve [~drandomtu@173-170-176-33.res.bhn.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 250 seconds] 10:15 < kanzure> plos visits counterculture labs http://blogs.plos.org/citizensci/2015/06/05/coops-scoop-do-it-yourself-together/ 10:19 -!- punsieve [~drandomtu@173-170-176-33.res.bhn.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 10:36 < kanzure> .wik senolytics 10:36 < yoleaux> "Senolytics are drugs that selectively induce death of senescent cells. Senescent cells are those that have stopped dividing. They accumulate in aging bodies and accelerate the aging process. Eliminating senescent cells increases the amount of time that mice are free of disease ("healthspan")." — http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senolytics 10:39 <@fenn> quercetin? 10:41 -!- Viper168 [~Viper@unaffiliated/viper168] has quit [Ping timeout: 258 seconds] 10:49 -!- Viper168 [~Viper@unaffiliated/viper168] has joined ##hplusroadmap 10:56 -!- Quashie [~boingredd@50.14.92.17] has quit [Ping timeout: 272 seconds] 10:56 -!- Quashie [~boingredd@50.14.92.17] has joined ##hplusroadmap 11:00 -!- Quashie_ [~boingredd@50.14.92.17] has joined ##hplusroadmap 11:02 -!- Quashie [~boingredd@50.14.92.17] has quit [Ping timeout: 250 seconds] 11:04 < kanzure> the problem with the "just get a data center of neural tissue cultures" approach is that the interface between remote regions of the brain is not merely electrical. and that sensing all the other factors is difficult and problematic to transfer over electrical-only interfaces to separate petri dishes. 11:05 -!- Quashie__ [~boingredd@50.14.92.17] has joined ##hplusroadmap 11:08 -!- Quashie_ [~boingredd@50.14.92.17] has quit [Ping timeout: 250 seconds] 11:10 <@fenn> are you talking about calcium fluctuations? 11:11 < kanzure> neurotransmitters and everything else 11:11 < kanzure> other proteins and transcripts 11:11 <@fenn> but... who cares 11:12 < kanzure> may be pivotal to its function tho? 11:12 <@fenn> my original idea was to literally have a tube sticking out of your head that connects to another brain (or brain-pod) 11:12 < kanzure> patch clamp experiments have shown neural networks to restructure in the presence of only electrical stimulation so perhaps you're right 11:13 -!- punsieve [~drandomtu@173-170-176-33.res.bhn.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 256 seconds] 11:13 <@fenn> but packet switched networks are super awesome and many orders of magnitude faster 11:14 < kanzure> you're just trading squishy problems for iptable problems :P 11:14 <@fenn> that's a deal i'd take any day 11:16 <@fenn> it might even be worth it to just add an internal optical network to the brain, to link up far-flung regions more effectively 11:17 <@fenn> like the plan for silicon chips to use optical interconnects 11:17 < kanzure> i wonder what the brain would route through that 11:17 <@fenn> oh the usual murmur 11:18 <@fenn> the interface would be optogenetically enhanced neurons right? so it would be whatever is going through the specific neurons that are linked to the optical network 11:18 -!- FourFire [~FourFire@145-48-11.connect.netcom.no] has joined ##hplusroadmap 11:18 < kanzure> yes but the brain can restructure to some extent 11:18 <@fenn> ba 11:18 < kanzure> so through whatever learning it experiences the actual traffic might be different from whatever region you thought you originally wired up (but this isn't a /problem/) 11:19 <@fenn> yes that's the whole point 11:19 <@fenn> i don't really want to think about potato salad every time i see the color blue 11:19 < kanzure> i don't believe you need optogenetics for that, only the interconnect needs to be optimal (actually, not even) 11:19 < kanzure> *optical 11:20 < kanzure> i believe a single wire can be faster than traveling through brain matter 11:20 -!- sheena [~home@S0106c8be196316d1.ok.shawcable.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 256 seconds] 11:20 < kanzure> even with delays related to electrical stimulation and electrical signal detection on both ends 11:20 <@fenn> of course, that's the whole point 11:20 <@fenn> it's like gaining an extra dimension 11:21 <@fenn> 3d chips vs 2d chips 11:21 < kanzure> (the wire doesn't need to be optical fiber) 11:21 <@fenn> anyway i think optogenetics is less harmful to the brain tissue 11:21 < kanzure> ah 11:21 <@fenn> and it's more selective 11:22 < kanzure> todo: selective breeding of neurons and other brain cells that can withstand being wired up to electrodes forever 11:22 <@fenn> also you could do some optical equivalent of "just a wire" where one cell emits photons and the photons travel down the fiber and stimulate another cell that is sensitive to that wavelength 11:23 < kanzure> sounds like they would need to be very very optically sensitive 11:23 <@fenn> sure well it's dark so why not 11:24 <@fenn> it just needs to have a reasonably good signal to noise ratio 11:24 < kanzure> hehe we could just attach photoreceptors to synapses :-) 11:25 <@fenn> the thing i dont like about "just a wire" is that it's basically hard-coded and can't restructure 11:25 <@fenn> but we don't really know the best way to hook everything together (or if it is even beneficial in the first place0 11:25 < kanzure> and you're worried that just a wire wouldn't be sufficient to see any sort of benefits? 11:26 <@fenn> well it's extremely unlikely that you'd guess the best possible configuration on the first try through sheer luck 11:26 < kanzure> perhaps interconnects are so advantageous that anything at all of that nature would confer obvious improvements..? 11:26 < kanzure> yeah ok 11:27 <@fenn> also it would be beneficial to be able to change the wiring in order to get a different perspective or for different situations 11:27 < FourFire> topic: Brain-brain / Brain-Computer direct interfaces? 11:27 < kanzure> topic: neural phototransception 11:27 < kanzure> fenn is proposing an army of optical telepathic gorillas 11:28 <@fenn> er, something like that 11:28 <@fenn> mumble mumble cyberbrain information superhighway raaah 11:29 -!- Taek [~quassel@2001:41d0:1:472e::] has quit [Quit: No Ping reply in 180 seconds.] 11:29 < FourFire> fenn, and a million typewriters? 11:29 -!- Taek [~quassel@2001:41d0:1:472e::] has joined ##hplusroadmap 11:29 <@fenn> fenn> add an internal optical network to the brain, to link up far-flung regions 11:30 <@fenn> far flung regions of the brai 11:30 <@fenn> n 11:31 < kanzure> how many wavelengths does the current optogenetics toolbox have anyway? 11:31 <@fenn> probably not more than 4 11:31 <@fenn> blue stuff tends to be phototoxic too 11:32 <@fenn> .wik neuromelanin 11:32 < yoleaux> "Neuromelanin (NM) is a dark pigment found in the brain which is structurally related to melanin. It is a polymer of 5,6-dihydroxyindole monomers. Neuromelanin is expressed in large quantities in dopaminergic cells of the substantia nigra, giving dark color to the structure." — http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuromelanin 11:32 < kanzure> i would expect more wavelengths to be more useful 11:33 <@fenn> of course 11:33 < kanzure> especially if the response curves are specific 11:33 <@fenn> it rapidly gets unfeasible when the wavelength is longer than cell body diameter 11:34 < kanzure> obviously what the neurons need is giant antennae proteins so they can pick up satellite communications 11:34 <@fenn> huh, "White people have lower amounts of neuromelanin. This is why Parkinson's disease and degenerative brain disorders such as dementia are more common among white-skinned populations." 11:34 <@fenn> okazaki bacteria 11:35 <@fenn> nevermind 11:37 <@fenn> anyway "more frequencies" is not scalable 11:37 < kanzure> neuromelanin should go on the wiki 11:38 <@fenn> why 11:38 < kanzure> lower propensity for dementia sounds like an okay thing to me 11:38 <@fenn> meh.. there are too many potential disease-proofing modifications to keep track of 11:38 < kanzure> for http://diyhpl.us/wiki/genetic-modifications/ 11:39 <@fenn> aw you copypasted this page to death 11:39 <@fenn> now it's just a bunch of random gene names 11:40 < kanzure> you mean the working memory section? 11:41 <@fenn> ok nevermind these actually make sense 11:42 <@fenn> i guess any list of potential genetic improvements is going to be ginormous 11:43 < kanzure> eventually this will need to include information about whether it's speculative or demonstrated or whatever else 11:45 < kanzure> i'm pretty happy that we've found such a direct way of improving working memory 11:45 < kanzure> like.... put that into a virus, let's role. 11:45 < kanzure> like.... put that into a virus, let's roll. 11:46 <@fenn> which one? 11:46 < kanzure> rs1800497 and/or rs2283265 11:47 <@fenn> .title http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0165032714000305 11:48 < yoleaux> fenn: Sorry, that doesn't appear to be an HTML page. 11:48 <@fenn> "DRD2 rs1800497 polymorphism increase the risk of mood disorder: Evidence from an update meta-analysis" 11:49 <@fenn> DRD2 is the dopamine receptor for positive reward? 11:49 <@fenn> so does this mutation increase the reward signal or decrease it? 11:50 <@fenn> "Some researchers have previously associated the polymorphism Taq 1A (rs1800497) to the DRD2 gene. However, the polymorphism resides in exon 8 of the ANKK1 gene.[9] DRD2 TaqIA polymorphism has been reported to be associated with an increased risk for developing motor fluctuations in Parkinson's disease." 11:51 <@fenn> "a single nucleotide polymorphism that causes an amino acid substitution within the 11th of 12 ankyrin repeats of ANKK1 (Glu713Lys of 765 residues). This polymorphism, which is commonly referred to Taq1A, was previously believed to be located in the promoter region of the DRD2 gene, since the polymorphism is proximal to the DRD2 gene and can influence DRD2 receptor expression.[1] It is now known 11:51 <@fenn> to be located in the coding region of the ANKK1 gene which controls the synthesis of dopamine in the brain.[2] The A1 allele is associated with increased activity of striatal L-amino acid decarboxylase." 11:52 <@fenn> so, in plain english, this mutation increases the synthesis of dopamine in the brain 11:54 <@fenn> this whole page is worth reading actually https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANKK1 11:59 <@fenn> so were you trying to give people the Taq1A+ or Taq1A- version of the gene? 12:04 <@fenn> the Soderquist paper was not about the rs1800497 improving working memory directly, but rather that children with the mutation were "trained" better to perform other working memory tasks (like the dual n-back brain-exercise regiment) 12:04 <@fenn> er, i mean they got more benefit from "brain exercise" supposedly 12:11 -!- punsieve [~drandomtu@173-170-176-33.res.bhn.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 12:12 < kanzure> yes and? that sounds okay to me. 12:13 < kanzure> also the paper mentions that others observed higher competence in those children or something after training, compared to the other group 12:14 < kanzure> (although not as an experimental result, clearly) 12:14 < kanzure> http://diyhpl.us/~bryan/papers2/neuro/working-memory/Polymorphisms%20in%20the%20dopamine%20receptor%202%20gene%20region%20influence%20improvements%20during%20working%20memory%20training%20in%20children%20and%20adolescents.pdf 12:14 < kanzure> oh nevermind. it was part of it. 12:15 < kanzure> and it was not about observers i guess 12:16 <@fenn> no it was self-perceived competence 12:17 <@fenn> and it's a super noisy graph anyway 12:18 < kanzure> what do you want, the secret of life on a silver platter? 12:18 <@fenn> did you read the ANKK1 page? sounds like a real clusterfuck to me. i'm not sure it would be good to make everyone a narcissistic histrionic borderline nutcase 12:18 -!- mode/##hplusroadmap [+o kanzure] by ChanServ 12:18 -!- mode/##hplusroadmap [-oo fenn kanzure] by kanzure 12:20 < kanzure> the preceding deopping was because i misinterpreted what someone else was saying 12:21 < kanzure> was demonstrating chanserv operation. but nevermind. 12:21 < fenn> A1+ allele: Hepatitis C infection, Antisocial personality disorder, Borderline personality traits, Dissocial personality disorder, Schizoid/avoidant behavior ... possibly reward deficiency syndrome and addictive behaviors 12:21 < kanzure> yes it's not surprising that there may not be a single variable for this trait 12:21 < kanzure> or that it is not an isolated lever 12:25 < fenn> well i don't think it's so simple as "make more dopamine, everyone is a genius and gets along fine" 12:25 < fenn> but this sounds pretty bad 12:25 < fenn> like, a real tradeoff 12:26 < fenn> apparently it's pretty high in prevalence already (20-40% of european population) 12:33 -!- Beatzebub [~beatzebub@d75-155-236-222.bchsia.telus.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 12:36 < gnusha> https://secure.diyhpl.us/cgit/diyhpluswiki/commit/?id=3c76a79a fenn: added warning about Taq1A allele >> http://diyhpl.us/diyhpluswiki/genetic-modifications/ 12:40 < heath> kanzure: keep in touch with todd huffman much? 12:40 < heath> was introduced to a guy today from Google who works on providing Internet access in challenging areas, especially in emerging economies 12:41 < kanzure> i say hello once in a while to todd 12:41 < heath> i know huffman is focused on 3scan still, but i thought it would be an interesting connection 12:41 < heath> this guy also worked at guardant health prior his position at google 12:44 < fenn> ... and? 12:45 < fenn> i don't mean to be confrontational, but what are we supposed to do with this information 12:47 < kanzure> (todd was doing remote internet access things) 12:50 -!- punsieve [~drandomtu@173-170-176-33.res.bhn.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 258 seconds] 12:50 -!- nmz787_i [~ntmccork@134.134.137.73] has quit [Quit: Leaving.] 12:51 -!- nmz787_i [~ntmccork@192.55.54.42] has joined ##hplusroadmap 12:58 -!- eudoxia [~eudoxia@r167-57-153-57.dialup.adsl.anteldata.net.uy] has quit [Quit: Leaving] 12:58 -!- nmz787_i [~ntmccork@192.55.54.42] has quit [Quit: Leaving.] 13:01 -!- CheckDavid [uid14990@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-fljcupyacozwpolq] has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 13:03 < FourFire> this looks interesting http://journals.plos.org/ploscompbiol/article?id=10.1371/journal.pcbi.1004295 13:04 < FourFire> their methodology is relevant for my project 13:04 -!- p4nd4 is now known as habe 13:04 < fenn> .title 13:04 < yoleaux> PLOS Computational Biology: Inferring Regulatory Networks from Experimental Morphological Phenotypes: A Computational Method Reverse-Engineers Planarian Regeneration 13:10 -!- sheena [~home@S0106c8be196316d1.ok.shawcable.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 13:14 < archels> how much does it cost to get a simple app made for Android/Apple platforms? 13:14 < archels> let's say, a very simple music player 13:16 < archels> ballpark figure 13:21 < heath> fenn: i was just wondering if kanzure stayed in touch with Todd, because I was writing a message to Todd to introduce these two people. Todd wouldn't know who I was, but I'm sure he remembers kanzure 13:25 -!- Acty [uid89656@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-yhbjtythbpxvwsti] has quit [Quit: Connection closed for inactivity] 13:37 < heath> archels: depends on who you hire and what you mean by simple. 13:38 < heath> archels: best bet is to email a few companies asking what they would charge 13:39 < archels> I want to outsource the bootstrapping part, essentially 13:40 < archels> getting the build chain set up, some boilerplate code 13:42 -!- CheckDavid [uid14990@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-qjfguggmqiynweak] has joined ##hplusroadmap 13:44 < kanzure> archels: you can find ready-made examples of that for all platforms 13:45 < kanzure> including pre-packaged developer environments (vagrant, etc) 13:45 < kanzure> as for native applications themselves, it really depends on what you want to do. again in the vast majority of cases, simple work is already readily available from open-source projects. 13:49 < kanzure> archels: for example, https://github.com/AndroidBootstrap/android-bootstrap 13:50 < kanzure> heath: at this point it is far more likely that todd huffman would remember fenn rather than me (although i do say hi to todd every once in a while; his memory is definitely not fading haha) 13:51 -!- zadock [~outsider@81.180.210.87] has quit [Quit: Leaving] 13:56 < kanzure> "Developing the servo web browser engine using rust" http://arxiv.org/pdf/1505.07383v1.pdf 14:00 < kanzure> "As mentioned in Section 2, all modern browsers use some combination of dirty bit marking and incremental recomputation heuristics to avoid reprocessing the full page when a mutatation is performed. Unfortunately, these heuristics are not only frequently the source of performance differences between browsers, but they are also a source of correctness bugs. A library that provided a form of self adjusting computation suited to incremental ... 14:00 < kanzure> ... recomputation of only the visible part of the page, perhaps based on the Adapton [HPHF14] approach, seems promising." 14:19 < kanzure> shouldn't someone be trying to engineer a sponge that can grow fast 14:26 < kanzure> https://www.reddit.com/r/DarkNetMarkets/comments/38nakm/visualisation_of_darknet_market_lifespans/crwjega 14:27 < kanzure> http://i.imgur.com/DLq1fDp.png 14:28 < kanzure> "In April 2015, TheRealDeal, the first open cyber-arms market for software exploits as well as drugs launched.[37]" 14:28 < kanzure> .wik TheRealDeal 14:28 < yoleaux> "TheRealDeal is a darknet website and a part of the cyber-arms industry reported to be selling code and zero-day software exploits." — http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TheRealDeal 14:30 -!- Madplatypus [uid19957@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-ngobadxtvxakllfn] has joined ##hplusroadmap 14:30 < kanzure> "Since about 2006 The Farmer's Market operated on Tor, until it was closed and several operators and users arrested in April 2012 as a result of Operation Adam Bomb, a two-year investigation led by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.[10] It has been considered a 'proto-Silk Road' but the use of payment services such as PayPal and Western Union allowed law enforcement to trace payments and it was subsequently shut down by the FBI in ... 14:30 < kanzure> ... 2012.[11][12]" 14:30 < kanzure> 6 years... 14:45 < kanzure> found a two-page document of russell hanson's gold nanoparticle receptor labeling idea http://russellhanson.com/web/Cosyne-2013-Abstract-FINAL.pdf 15:01 -!- punsieve [~drandomtu@173-170-176-33.res.bhn.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 15:03 -!- Zinglon [~Zinglon@ip565f6f48.direct-adsl.nl] has quit [Ping timeout: 276 seconds] 15:07 -!- TheoryCat [user0000@unaffiliated/wye-naught/x-8734122] has joined ##hplusroadmap 15:14 -!- eudoxia [~eudoxia@r186-54-157-162.dialup.adsl.anteldata.net.uy] has joined ##hplusroadmap 15:20 -!- PatrickRobotham [uid18270@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-lfcwrlshtmusustd] has quit [Quit: Connection closed for inactivity] 15:21 < kanzure> .title http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2015/05/dont-fear-the-crispr.html 15:21 < yoleaux> Don’t Fear the CRISPR 15:22 < kanzure> .title http://marginalrevolution.com/marginalrevolution/2015/05/dont-fear-crispr-babies-2.html 15:22 < yoleaux> Genetically Engineering Humans Isn’t So Scary (Don’t Fear the CRISPR, Part 2) 15:23 < kanzure> "Height is similarly controlled by hundreds of gene. 697 genes together account for just one fifth of the heritability of adult height. (Paper at Nature Genetics here)." http://www.nature.com/ng/journal/v46/n11/full/ng.3097.html 15:24 -!- HEx1 [~HEx@hexwab.plus.com] has joined ##hplusroadmap 15:24 < kanzure> "And while it would pose issues for inequality, the best solution might be to try to rectify inequality of access, rather than ban the technique. (Consider that IVF is subsidized in places as different as Singapore and Sweden.)" 15:24 < kanzure> cool 15:33 < kanzure> .title http://iopscience.iop.org/1741-2552/9/5/056012 15:33 < yoleaux> Facilitation and restoration of cognitive function in primate prefrontal cortex by a neuroprosthesis that utilizes minicolumn-specific neural firing - Abstract - Journal of Neural Engineering - IOPscience 15:36 -!- justanot1eruser [~Justan@unaffiliated/justanotheruser] has joined ##hplusroadmap 15:36 < kanzure> .title http://www.nature.com/ng/journal/v46/n11/full/ng.3097.html 15:36 < yoleaux> Defining the role of common variation in the genomic and biological architecture of adult human height : Nature Genetics : Nature Publishing Group 15:37 -!- justanotheruser [~Justan@unaffiliated/justanotheruser] has quit [Disconnected by services] 15:37 -!- justanot1eruser is now known as justanotheruser 15:40 < fenn> .title http://www.scripps.edu/news/press/2015/20150309agingcell.html 15:40 < yoleaux> Scripps Research, Mayo Clinic Scientists Find New Class of Drugs that Dramatically Increases Healthy Lifespan 15:40 < fenn> i see jordan miller on the list of authors 15:40 < fenn> it's about the "senolytics" quercetin and dasatinib 15:42 < fenn> .title http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acel.12344/abstract 15:42 < yoleaux> The Achilles’ heel of senescent cells: from transcriptome to senolytic drugs - Zhu - 2015 - Aging Cell - Wiley Online Library 15:44 < fenn> oh it's a different jordan miller... jordan D miller not jordan S miller 15:48 -!- CheckDavid [uid14990@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-qjfguggmqiynweak] has quit [Quit: Connection closed for inactivity] 15:55 < kanzure> i wonder why 697 genes and not 5,000 genes or 50 genes 15:55 < fenn> why are watermelons pink 15:55 < kanzure> are they? 15:56 < fenn> no, they're green 15:56 < kanzure> well that's an easy answer then 15:56 < kanzure> chlorophyll etc 15:58 < fenn> my point was it's a dumb question 16:00 < fenn> there are big dogs and small dogs. i doubt they have mutations in 700 genes to make them big or small 16:02 < kanzure> i have no idea 16:09 < fenn> ok here's another hypothesis for the pile of theores about the evolution of intelligence http://nootropics.com/intelligence/sexy.html 16:10 -!- erasmus [~esb@unaffiliated/erasmus] has joined ##hplusroadmap 16:11 < kanzure> this paper mentioned some reasons why some women find intelligence and wordsaying to be attractive http://diyhpl.us/~bryan/papers2/neuro/language/Language%20evolution%20and%20human%20development.pdf 16:11 < kanzure> it also has the potential to explain the "quantum physics" phenomenon that plagues okcupid 16:11 -!- Viper168 [~Viper@unaffiliated/viper168] has quit [Ping timeout: 252 seconds] 16:12 < chris_99> "quantum physics" phenomenon? 16:12 < punsieve> oh good I'm not the only one going, "bwah?" 16:12 < kanzure> okcupid has a very large quantity of profiles that profess an interest in "quantum physics" 16:13 < chris_99> oh heh 16:13 < punsieve> maybe a lot of people read Deepak Chopra? 16:14 < fenn> but aren't you unfairly discounting the idea that okcupid overwhelmingly attracts quantum physicists? 16:14 < kanzure> punsieve: entirely possible 16:14 < kanzure> fenn: yes 16:14 < eudoxia> ah, yes 16:14 < punsieve> I met a theoretical physicist on there 16:14 < eudoxia> i remember the old blogger profile from years back 16:14 < eudoxia> "my interests: [...], quantum physics, [...]" 16:14 < eudoxia> don't judge teenagers are idiots 16:15 < fenn> do teenagers use okcupid? 16:15 < eudoxia> idk probably 16:15 < kanzure> there's a minimum age (18) but probably 16:15 < punsieve> there didn't used to be... it used to be just a site that had a lot of fun quizzes, and the dating stuff was just an aside 16:16 < punsieve> so I was on there at 15 or 16 16:16 < fenn> um... i think you were misled 16:17 < kanzure> in the paper i linked above, the authors suggest that mate selection played a role with intelligence because why would you want a mate that is incompatible with group life or is really bad at it 16:17 < fenn> hum 16:17 < fenn> "TheSpark.com featured a number of humorous self-quizzes and personality tests, including the four-variable Myers-Briggs style Match Test. SparkMatch debuted as a beta experiment of allowing registered users who had taken the Match Test to search for and contact each other based on their Match Test types. The popularity of SparkMatch took off and it was launched as its own site, later renamed 16:17 < fenn> OkCupid." 16:18 < punsieve> well, it's possible I lied about my age, but was definitely a place where you took fun and silly quizzes you shared with you friends 16:18 < kanzure> i think they had a clever entry into the market, yes. 16:18 < kanzure> and they totally cornered the segment of the market that gets addicted to question-answering 16:19 < kanzure> http://web.archive.org/web/20130117001930/http://www.okcupid.com/profile/Eyudkowsky 16:20 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@2601:3:8200:11a7:c083:a7ff:a935:a3cf] has joined ##hplusroadmap 16:20 < eudoxia> >only one zindell novel 16:21 < kanzure> right? 16:21 < fenn> when you start listing 500 books people stop reading your profile 16:22 < punsieve> nah, I just do ctrl+f for favorites 16:24 < eudoxia> i'm surprised he only speaks english though maybe that's outdated 16:25 < FourFire> I'm staying off IRC & Reddit for the next 30 days, productivity experiment 16:25 < FourFire> cya all on the 7th, 16:25 < dingo> kanzure: we set vova up with a new job remote, he's working on some ~1,000 graphviz node graph of something (product build related), i'm about to make one myself (salt state dependency tree), you ever play with graphviz much? any tips? 16:25 < FourFire> (or not) 16:25 < kanzure> FourFire: that's going to be a disaster 16:25 < FourFire> kanzure, tell me about it once I've failed 16:25 -!- FourFire [~FourFire@145-48-11.connect.netcom.no] has quit [Quit: Leaving] 16:25 < fenn> the 7th? 16:26 < kanzure> FourFire: you should cut yourself off from the people physically around you, not the ones on the interwebs 16:26 < kanzure> bah whatever 16:26 < kanzure> he's doing it wrong 16:26 < kanzure> dingo: yes i have done much graphviz things in my time 16:26 < dingo> also i should clarify, i don't work with vova, cindy got him a job at 'VI' 16:26 < kanzure> dingo: i once worked in a graph theory lab 16:26 < kanzure> so.. graph stuff.. graphviz.. dot files.. yeah. 16:27 < dingo> i've been mentally dreaming graph state trees for days now 16:27 < fenn> graphviz is kinda dated 16:27 < dingo> how i'd like it visualized 16:27 < dingo> what's the good news, fenn 16:27 < fenn> there are a lot of javascript visualization libraries that are more powerful 16:27 < kanzure> unfortunately those require javascript 16:27 < eudoxia> graphviz needs to make it easier to arrange clusters into shapes, god damn 16:27 < dingo> not fitting in with the salt, python, yaml, theme 16:27 < eudoxia> fenn: graphviz lets me build the graphs on the "server" (or my local computer) without running a node instance 16:28 < kanzure> fenn also has lots of graphviz experience 16:28 < dingo> eudoxia: that's exactly what i know i'll run into, the grouping and shifting and moving of the graph, manipulating it... i have a feeling i won't be able to 16:28 < fenn> you won't be able to 16:28 < dingo> i watched vova make a graph tree image that was a billion pixels wide, a few hundred tall 16:28 < kanzure> dingo: there was some cool visualization stuff that came out of gephi 16:29 < eudoxia> dingo: yeah best you can do is run the .dot file through some auxiliary programs that annotate each node with position (or weight?) info to control layout 16:29 < eudoxia> it's quite terrible 16:29 < fenn> i think you can export as svg and then mess with it in inkscape 16:29 < kanzure> eudoxia: you should annotate while you are generating the file, not after 16:29 < eudoxia> kanzure: no, the computer should figure that out for me 16:29 < dingo> yeah, i'm ok with programmatic myself, but some documentation guide wants a sample partial-fail state tree to put in documentation prettily 16:30 < kanzure> i have never made productive use of a graph that i have generated with graphviz 16:30 < dingo> i thought i might see if there was something i could do to help him out with the pretty part 16:30 < kanzure> for prettification there's various options but svg has more 16:30 < dingo> i spent a week tackling state requires in salt, they were implicit, the state tree shifts, and then the implicit ones break unless they're made eplicit 16:31 < dingo> and i thought, hell, damn, i wonder what this *looks* like, these "bugs" 16:31 < dingo> if i could visualize that, mm mm 16:31 < kanzure> .title https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bXCBh6QH5W0 16:31 < yoleaux> Introducing Gephi 0.7 - YouTube 16:31 < dingo> "this pull requests changes state tree from A -> B" with image 16:34 < dingo> just my friday developer dreams 16:34 < fenn> "finally, an alternative to cytoscape!" 16:35 < dingo> somebody else wrote what i need, but the data structures changed slightly since, but his alogorithms are crap.. i tried to persuade them, but now i'm mostly complete rewriting them, then i came down with flu 16:35 < kanzure> .title https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3Wo22jl4Ac&list=FLleLmaHO-WK_bJ_wJdcfB3Q 16:35 < yoleaux> Wikipedia Edits During the Middle-East Protests - YouTube 16:35 < dingo> i think his code gave me the flu 16:35 < kanzure> i'm almost completely certain that's how the flu is transmitted 16:35 < dingo> https://github.com/ceralena/salt-state-graph/blob/master/salt-state-graph.py 16:35 < fenn> INFECTIOUS CODE ALERT - DO NOT OPEN!!! 16:35 < dingo> do it, do it 16:36 < kanzure> when i looked at the documentation for salt state states i found it incomprehensible 16:36 < dingo> its not written for the layman OR a scientist 16:36 < kanzure> strange to see pydot still being used, what happened to networkx? 16:36 < kanzure> http://networkx.lanl.gov/ 16:36 < dingo> its like the top 5% surface example plus raw api parameter definitions 16:38 < dingo> that looks pretty good, that networkx 16:39 < dingo> has weight and all 16:39 < dingo> thanks for the tip 16:39 < fenn> yeah i forgot all of the python graph things we used 16:40 < fenn> they were all terrible though 16:40 < kanzure> including my python reimplementation of graphviz :-) 16:44 < kanzure> whoops i mean graphsynth 16:44 < kanzure> i was thinking "huh it's strange that the project had the same name as graphviz" for a few minutes there, then i spontaneously remembered the correct name 16:47 < kanzure> .wik cytoscape 16:47 < yoleaux> "Cytoscape is an open source bioinformatics software platform for visualizing molecular interaction networks and integrating with gene expression profiles and other state data. Additional features are available as plugins." — http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytoscape 16:49 -!- erasmus [~esb@unaffiliated/erasmus] has quit [Quit: Namaste] 17:11 -!- helleshin [~talinck@66-161-138-110.ubr1.dyn.lebanon-oh.fuse.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 17:40 -!- helleshin [~talinck@66-161-138-110.ubr1.dyn.lebanon-oh.fuse.net] has quit [Quit: Connection reset by bear] 17:54 -!- helleshin [~talinck@66-161-138-110.ubr1.dyn.lebanon-oh.fuse.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 17:54 < kanzure> heh someone tried "cat /dev/urandom > /dev/random" http://security.stackexchange.com/a/69433/38412 17:56 < kanzure> .wik zimmermann-sassaman key signing protocol 17:56 < yoleaux> "In cryptography, the Zimmermann–Sassaman key-signing protocol is a protocol to speed up the public key fingerprint verification part of a key signing party. It requires some work before the event." — http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zimmermann-Sassaman_key-signing_protocol 17:56 -!- chris_99 [~chris_99@unaffiliated/chris-99/x-3062929] has quit [Remote host closed the connection] 17:56 < kanzure> "The protocol was invented during a key signing party with Len Sassaman, Werner Koch, Phil Zimmermann, and others." 17:57 < kanzure> heh 17:57 < kanzure> "so phil zimmermann, werner koch and len sassaman walk into a bar..." 17:58 < kanzure> "The Sassaman-Projected method is a modified version of the Sassaman-Efficient, with the purpose for large groups. They both follow the same way with the exception of verifying identity. Instead of doing it individually the 2 forms of ID are projected for everyone to see at once. Once the person has verified that it is their key, the rest of the participants make 2 check marks next to the key.[2]" 17:59 < kanzure> hmm does a projected form of identification count 17:59 < kanzure> i thought the point was to avoid possibly-fake digital images or something 18:03 -!- AmbulatoryCortex [~Ambulator@173-31-9-188.client.mchsi.com] has joined ##hplusroadmap 18:03 < Betawolf> the point seems to be that you publically affirm that this is your key to a large group rather than one-by-one, I think. 18:03 < kanzure> but you could have done that online 18:03 < kanzure> there was a reason why they weren't doing it online in the first place 18:05 < Betawolf> true, but they later present identification which matches with their physical appearance. I agree it could probably be skipped, it just seems to be a check so that the organisers of the party don't get people to affirm that the wrong key is theirs. 18:06 -!- Viper168 [~Viper@unaffiliated/viper168] has joined ##hplusroadmap 18:06 < Betawolf> i.e. you submit one key, turn up to the party and assume that the one you're showing people is the one you sent. Seems a rather unlikely failure mode. 18:07 -!- eudoxia [~eudoxia@r186-54-157-162.dialup.adsl.anteldata.net.uy] has quit [Quit: Leaving] 18:22 -!- habe is now known as p4nd4 18:47 -!- maaku [~quassel@50-0-37-37.dsl.static.fusionbroadband.com] has quit [Quit: No Ping reply in 180 seconds.] 18:48 -!- maaku [~quassel@50-0-37-37.dsl.static.fusionbroadband.com] has joined ##hplusroadmap 18:48 -!- maaku is now known as Guest4389 19:16 < kanzure> fenn: so have you ever made an actually-useful graphviz image? 19:16 < kanzure> when i said i have never learned anything from looking at a graph image like that, i was serious 19:17 < fenn> sadly, no 19:19 < fenn> i thought maybe i made one about manufacturing processes but i probably just dreamed that 19:20 < fenn> i made a lot of graphviz images though, so i probably did make one useful one and just can't remember it 19:21 < fenn> but stuff like call graphs and debian package dependencies are basically useless 19:21 -!- helleshin [~talinck@66-161-138-110.ubr1.dyn.lebanon-oh.fuse.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 255 seconds] 19:21 < kanzure> my visual cortex is probably just stunted or whatever 19:21 < kanzure> even the k-means-cluster graph images don't make sense to me. couldn't i just read a list of the clusters and their members instead? 19:22 < kanzure> yes i have looked at lots of call graph images and extracted approximately zero utility 19:23 < fenn> k-means clusters probably make more sense if you overlay gaussian contour lines 19:23 < fenn> like the ellipse at 50% probability 19:23 < kanzure> they make "sense"- i can see the clusters or whatever- but i could have just as easily seen them if printed out in a list instead. 19:29 < fenn> is there a website where you just dump a CSV into it and it shows 50 different data visualization types? 19:29 -!- Adlai [~Adlai@82.166.20.29] has quit [Changing host] 19:29 -!- Adlai [~Adlai@unaffiliated/adlai] has joined ##hplusroadmap 19:30 -!- helleshin [~talinck@66-161-138-110.ubr1.dyn.lebanon-oh.fuse.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 19:30 < fenn> (and presumably stores your data to sell on a secret data black market) 19:31 < fenn> it could all be done in javascript though 19:31 -!- erasmus [~esb@unaffiliated/erasmus] has joined ##hplusroadmap 19:51 -!- helleshin [~talinck@66-161-138-110.ubr1.dyn.lebanon-oh.fuse.net] has quit [Read error: Connection reset by peer] 19:53 -!- helleshin [~talinck@66-161-138-110.ubr1.dyn.lebanon-oh.fuse.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 20:12 -!- jdolan_ [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 20:13 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@2601:3:8200:11a7:c083:a7ff:a935:a3cf] has quit [Read error: Connection reset by peer] 20:18 < kanzure> temple grandin dumped out a new book, http://www.amazon.com/The-Autistic-Brain-Thinking-Spectrum/dp/0547636458 20:18 < kanzure> "Instead of - or at least in addition to - assigning human subjects to studies through a common autism diagnosis, we should be assigning them by main symptom. I sometimes see researchers pooh-poohing self-reports. But as I learned from examples like Carly Fleischmann's description of feeling overstimulated in the coffee shop, I think what researchers should be doing is looking at the self-reports very carefully as well as eliciting them ... 20:18 < kanzure> ... in new ways. They they should be putting the subjects into studies based on those self-reports." 20:23 -!- AmbulatoryCortex [~Ambulator@173-31-9-188.client.mchsi.com] has quit [Read error: Connection reset by peer] 20:24 < punsieve> that book is two years old 20:25 -!- wrldpc [~ben@hcccbcad2a0.bai.ne.jp] has joined ##hplusroadmap 20:32 -!- punsieve [~drandomtu@173-170-176-33.res.bhn.net] has quit [Ping timeout: 264 seconds] 20:34 -!- helleshin [~talinck@66-161-138-110.ubr1.dyn.lebanon-oh.fuse.net] has quit [Quit: Connection reset by bear] 20:35 -!- jdolan_ [~jdolan@c-50-188-243-111.hsd1.fl.comcast.net] has quit [Read error: Connection reset by peer] 20:35 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@2601:3:8200:11a7:c083:a7ff:a935:a3cf] has joined ##hplusroadmap 20:39 -!- erasmus [~esb@unaffiliated/erasmus] has quit [Read error: Connection reset by peer] 20:49 -!- helleshin [~talinck@66-161-138-110.ubr1.dyn.lebanon-oh.fuse.net] has joined ##hplusroadmap 20:52 < JayDugger> Have I arrived 10^8 years ahead? 20:57 -!- erasmus [~esb@unaffiliated/erasmus] has joined ##hplusroadmap 21:34 -!- TheoryCat [user0000@unaffiliated/wye-naught/x-8734122] has quit [Quit: Goodbye] 22:04 -!- TheoryCat [user0000@unaffiliated/wye-naught/x-8734122] has joined ##hplusroadmap 22:18 -!- erasmus [~esb@unaffiliated/erasmus] has quit [Quit: Namaste ] 22:24 -!- TheoryCat [user0000@unaffiliated/wye-naught/x-8734122] has quit [Quit: Goodbye] 22:38 -!- PatrickRobotham [uid18270@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-csxxrexnjpkpuqzj] has joined ##hplusroadmap 23:06 -!- jdolan_ [~jdolan@2601:3:8200:11a7:c083:a7ff:a935:a3cf] has joined ##hplusroadmap 23:07 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@2601:3:8200:11a7:c083:a7ff:a935:a3cf] has quit [Read error: Connection reset by peer] 23:23 -!- jdolan_ [~jdolan@2601:3:8200:11a7:c083:a7ff:a935:a3cf] has quit [Ping timeout: 265 seconds] 23:23 -!- jdolan [~jdolan@2601:3:8200:11a7:c083:a7ff:a935:a3cf] has joined ##hplusroadmap 23:35 < jrayhawk> http://piny.be/ahl/architecture/ five years ago i made a graph explaining change propagation to people administrating some game servers for me once 23:35 < jrayhawk> i think it was useful 23:45 < jrayhawk> a graph useful to the person generating it is definitely a rarer circumstance --- Log closed Sat Jun 06 00:00:33 2015