narain | i imagine it should be possible to implement them though how does lambdabot maintain its memories if it "goes down from time to time"? dump them to a file somewhere? |
stepcut | narain: yes |
sorear | yes, a set of files gzipped binary evil |
action | narain imagines patching lambdabot's memoirs with the ones lb's been saving |
narain | imagines patching lambdabot's memoirs with the ones lb's been saving |
stepcut | narain: I think the problem is figuring out how to merge the changes, since some actionss are destructive though, I guess lb essentially started with nothing, so it is all new stuff |
mauke | @quote |
lb | apfelmus says: Haskell is the first programming language that really offers the possibility to specify data dependencies exactly as they are because Haskell is pure, higher order and has a powerful type system. |
narain | possibly dumb/crazy idea: you could take the entire irc logs since lb's been running and feed them to lambdabot? |
stepcut | narain: you would probably have to filter out everything <lb> said to ensure the same results, but that could sort of work narain: @seen would have a skewed view of things |
narain | that's true so many plugins lb has |
sorear | grr. I seem to have forgotten the passphrase to ndm's haskell.org login private key |
stepcut | is it 12345 ? |
dmwit | Crap! Now I have to change my password again. I can't believe you guys go transmitting my password around in plaintext. ;-) |
stepcut | dmwit: if you type your password in this channel ChanServ will automatically hide it for you, like ******** ;) |
sorear | it's not my password, my root password, my haskellwiki password, my email password, or my ghc-wiki password |
dmwit | I'm no bash.org newby. ;-) |
stepcut | :p |
action | sorear has a practice of writing down things like this, but can't find the file |
sorear | has a practice of writing down things like this, but can't find the file |
action | narain uses at most three passwords at a time: one for critical logins, one for non-critical logins, and one for very non-critical logins he needs to share with people |
narain | uses at most three passwords at a time: one for critical logins, one for non-critical logins, and one for very non-critical logins he needs to share with people |
action | dmwit changes his password often, but keeps a list of *old* passwords in plaintext. |
dmwit | changes his password often, but keeps a list of *old* passwords in plaintext. |
action | stepcut uses kwalletmanager |
stepcut | uses kwalletmanager |
dmwit | (In case he forgets to change one and doesn't remember how many revisions ago he last changed it. ;-) |
action | sorear keeps his root password written on a piece of paper next to his computer. Anyone who can get that close doesn't need it. |
sorear | keeps his root password written on a piece of paper next to his computer. Anyone who can get that close doesn't need it. |
action | dmwit puts on his ninja gear |
dmwit | puts on his ninja gear |
narain | a true ninja is always in gear |
sorear | again, if you can get that close, you'd be wiser to use init=/bin/sh |
dmwit | ?go init=/bin/sh |
lb | http://www.linux-mips.org/archives/linux-mips/1997-04/msg00050.html Title: Re: init=/bin/sh and serial devices |
stepcut | sorear: you don't have a BIOS password!?!?! anyway, you'd be even wiser to use init=/usr/bin/emacs |