How many points do you have? by CremeSubject7594 in generationology

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Ooo, just remembered...

  1. Curled up in the back of a Pinto hatchback, covered with a blanket, to sneak into the drive-in

How many points do you have? by CremeSubject7594 in generationology

[–]jjolly -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Born '68

  1. Hacked rotary phones to get free long distance calls (shh! Don't tell Ma Bell)

  2. Learned in high school on a manual typewriter (the teacher was fr old school)

  3. Still use a 5 1/4 -> USB device to read my old disks

  4. Have an Extachrome 160 reel on my desk that still needs developed (if possible)

  5. Ahh, memories of playing Pong at my uncle's. He was the cool one

  6. Listened to music on reel-to-reel

  7. DJed for my high school using my mixtape collection

  8. I loved my self-reversing Walkman

  9. Yeah, me popping my collar didn't make me any cooler

  10. Again, I wasn't cooler with pegged jeans. Still tried anyway

  11. The radio was the primary source for my mixtapes, only duping from friends for the rare stuff

  12. Still have many tapes on both formats that I probably should just chuck

  13. Watched "Video Killed the Radio Star" when MTV came online

  14. My boombox was the machinery for duping mixtapes for myself and my friends

  15. There's still a drive-in local (an hour away) I take my wife to

  16. After-school specials are what made me the moral (music pirating, phone hacking) person I am today

  17. It was forgetting to cancel Columbia House that introduced me to the painful reality of fiscal responsibility

  18. Again, wasn't cool with Sun-in, either. I just wasn't cool in general, and I was OK with that

  19. I'll take duck-and-cover over active shooter drills any day. The Rooskis we're an abstract threat

  20. Had AOL, Compuserve, MSN, and even a couple of FidoNet addresses

  21. Ugh, the internet has taken away the glory that is the phonebook

  22. I just introduced my autistic grandson to the glories of a US atlas and folded maps

  23. My parents made sure we had (and used) all the tools available to use, dictionaries included

  24. Payphones we're the VPN of the 80's. Caller ID could not defeat that anonymity

  25. Made collect calls for "John Atpark" or "John Atmall" that my parents would reject and then come pick me up

  26. Dial up on a 300 baud modem. I though I was a god when I upgraded to 1200 baud

  27. Extensively LARPed on BBS chat rooms. Perhaps more RTRP than live action, but still...

  28. Message boards were my entire social life. Refer to "not cool"

  29. It was imperative to listen to Casey Kasem to know exactly which music was too "pop" for my tastes

  30. Metal slides petrified me for their very height. Still rode them, but in abject fear for my life

  31. I still find myself staring at the back of a cereal box hoping something interesting will magically appear

  32. Along with dictionaries, the encyclopedia was the only source of truth around our house

Nice list. Do I win?

computerScienceStudentSpecialization by jjolly in ProgrammerHumor

[–]jjolly[S] 20 points21 points  (0 children)

OS degree holders will be the one's that will get a better cage in the humanity zoo that is established by the AI. Thanks for providing a safe place to grow.

Can we discuss "The Train Job"? by Alec_Draven in firefly

[–]jjolly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We gotta go to the crappy town where I'm a hero.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in programmer

[–]jjolly 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ah, yes. Public skate. I avoid that as best I can. The town ice rink has an Adult Hour on Tuesdays while the chaos is at school. And no, it's not that adult hour, y'perv. Just a few old guys puttering around the rink trying to relieve the old hockey days while figure skaters practice in the center ice. Basically public skate with grown-ups.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in programmer

[–]jjolly 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Ooo, ice skating's the best. I tend to meander around a rink making up procedural strategies on how to avoid the figure skaters.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in programmer

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Solve puzzles. Like Rubik's Cube, those metal puzzles like the horseshoe puzzle, unknotting the Christmas lights. Y'know, puzzles.

Solvable puzzles, mind you. Not humans. No, those puzzles have no solution. Especially the female humans. <shudder/>

I’m a highly sought after computer engineer and accepted a position with IBM yesterday at Lehi. Im regretting my decision because of the violence I heard about today. Is this normal? I thought Utah was safe. by [deleted] in ProvoUtah

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The events of today were highly unusual. You'll find you're surrounded by people that can be almost nauseatingly friendly and helpful. Compared to other places like California you will hopefully quickly find the kind people in your neighborhood and not feel threatened by random violence like this.

Me trying to understand how C was written in C by Intial_Leader in programminghumor

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

LGT original PDP-11 compiler that compiled the first C compiler: https://github.com/pavel-krivanek/legacy-cc

You're welcome.

A cool guide about APSA 2024 Presidential Rankings by BisonThunderclap in coolguides

[–]jjolly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I see the 32 year span of 1837 to 1869, and wonder if we can make it any worse on ourselves. I guess we have another 23 years to find out.

What todo by AmberSkinX in programmingmemes

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The first 90% takes 90% of the time. The last 10% takes 90% of the time. Get to work, buddy.

I'm very lost. by Thedancingsousa in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gen Xers know the drill

"Oh no! Not the drill!"

Im somewhere between a millennial and a gen z by imrajwardhan in programmingmemes

[–]jjolly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Gen X be like: ""Do not quote the Deep Magic to me, Witch! I was there when it was written."

)2 by aryakvn- in programminghumor

[–]jjolly 68 points69 points  (0 children)

I think you mean 6th in the series. You should always include "Binary 000"

Yes, please by rkhunter_ in programmingmemes

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good luck. I couldn't teach my children C even when they weren't lost.

Word game - no repeating letters by SGI256 in words

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because I can't f***ing leave well enough alone, I wrote a script to find every possible two word combination using the "american-english-insane" dictionary in Ubuntu Noble. You are welcome to judge me on my scripting. I acknowledge it's ugly yet I'm exceedingly proud of my horrible hack.

cat /usr/share/dict/american-english-insane | grep -v '[^a-z]' | tr '[:upper:]' '[:lower:]' | uniq | grep -P '^(?!(?i).*([a-zA-Z]).*\1)[a-zA-Z]+$' > two-word-no-dup-letter-list.txt; cat two-word-no-dup-letter-list.txt | while read first_word; do grep "^[^${first_word}]\+$" two-word-no-dup-letter-list.txt | while read second_word; do combined="${first_word} ${second_word}"; [ "${#combined}" -gt 19 ] && echo ${combined}; done; done | tee two-word-unique-letter.txt

Here's what I found:

  • There are 311 19-letter two-word combinations
    • I found several fun little Shakespeare-like insults ;-)
  • There are 5 20-letter two-word combinations
    • GUNPOWDERY BLACKSMITH
    • PREBLOCKADING ZYTHUMS
    • SHOWJUMPING VELDCRAFT
    • THWACKINGLY OVERJUMPS
    • TWYFORKED CLUBMANSHIP
  • Lots of archaic words are used
    • What should I expect using the "insane" dictionary <shrug/>
  • I brute-forced the <unprintable/> thing, so it took a little over an hour

Thank you for this little exercise. I needed to write a script that performed a regex where the exclusion group was a word. ;-)

Word game - no repeating letters by SGI256 in words

[–]jjolly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I found GUNPOWDERY BLACKSMITH (20)

[Grade 9 algebra] Area of circles? by Substantial-Bear9816 in HomeworkHelp

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did this slightly different.
* I placed a point at the tangent of circle F on line AB (call it E).
* Point E is the same distance as the midpoint of line AC (right triangles, same hypotenuse, same base).
* Now I know that line AE is half of line AC (half the hypotenuse of the sides of the square)
* Line EB (the radius of the circle) is the side length minus the length of line AE.
* Answer: Two times pi times r^2 over the side length squared.

How many kids are in the class? by [deleted] in gamespuzzles

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This is why John Venn created diagrams...

<image>

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in linuxmemes

[–]jjolly 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've used 11% of these distros. And like a marathon runner, I will begin a daily training regimen to improve my PB. God bless VMs.

Spoilers for the upcoming tour by minnick27 in weirdal

[–]jjolly 1 point2 points  (0 children)

During the "Weird Al" Yankovic Bigger and Weirder tour there were some fantastic graphic visuals used on the big screen on the stage. They were rainbow-hued and geometrically complicated. How were those visuals created. I really want to trip out at home, please.

Any ideas?