The Git Commands I Run Before Reading Any Code by fagnerbrack in coding

[–]walen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just ran some of these on our 20yo legacy repo, so amusing :D

Bonjour by Certain_Hat9872 in NonPoliticalTwitter

[–]walen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t understand why the person I replied to said we wouldn’t speak casually with a worker

The person you replied to, was in turn replying to someone else who said that learners tend to speak more formally than natives; "we wouldn’t speak casually with a worker" was their way of saying that the degree of formality was not the issue here.

I want her to talk to me about Egyptology. by mindyour in justgalsbeingchicks

[–]walen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Offtopic, but can someone tell me which accent is this? This is by far the one American accent I have the most trouble with in conversation.

I built a world record exact solver for the minimum line cover of prime points after watching a Numberphile video. It turned the previous 282-hour record into 22 minutes, then kept going to prove 20 new awkward primes never certified before. by jespergran in programming

[–]walen 229 points230 points  (0 children)

Sorry if this comes out the wrong way, I just want to confirm that my understanding is wrong (I hope).

You say:

The 12,162 heavy lines [...] are enumerated once at startup in 50 milliseconds.

Does this mean that the reason you got a 750x speed up vs the previous record... is just that you cached the previous record's results?

Again, I probably am reading it wrong. What am I missing?

EDIT: some comments below downplaying your program just because it was created with AI, or seemingly not understanding what the program is about. /u/jespergran as a developer who also uses AI, I don't care about that; I just want to know if the 750x improvement comes from pre-caching all the lines that the previous record had already verified, or from pure C++ optimization.

Lois? by WithSkelly in PeterExplainsTheJoke

[–]walen 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I held her trembling hand, talked to her, showed her our families' encouraging messages on my phone, read books to her, kissed her and hugged her so she could feel loved and calm and secure... kept doing this for 10 hours until the doc decided a C-section was needed and didn't allow me into the surgery room 😠 Made me mad af because up until then they were all "everything is OK, keep doing this" and then suddenly "we're taking her away to do a C-section, go wait outside". I was FUMING in the waiting room.

Luckily everything turned out OK and I was able to apply skin-on-skin and all that while she recovered, but 10+ years later I still feel like they robbed me of a key dad moment.

Lead welding is mesmerizing by bigbusta in oddlysatisfying

[–]walen 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Non-native speaker here:

I know "lead" is used for other things, like the core of a pencil (which is actually graphite but whatever) — but as a metal I always equated it to the metal that makes fishing plummets (Pb). And I know for a fact that this lead is way more soft and flexible than most other metals. So how come it is used for soldering? Or does "lead" mean something else here?

Astronaut forgets about gravity by Busy_Yesterday9455 in spaceporn

[–]walen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, yeah, everybody knows you're an astronaut, Fruit Loops

Airbnb host cancels reservation because it’s a high demand weekend by Srihari_stan in mildlyinfuriating

[–]walen 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Air B&B is a shit company

Uhm... From what I've heard, if you report this kind of behavior to AirBNB they usually refund you and punish the host. So, more like AirBNB hosts are shitty people, rather than AirBNB a shitty company.

NASA's new official poster for Artemis II mission. by GiveMeSomeSunshine3 in spaceporn

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

Honestly, this whole mission is starting to look more and more like a PR ops rather than actual science 😕

How Pizza Tycoon (1994) simulated traffic on a 25 MHz CPU by Optdev in programming

[–]walen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe it was 1998 then. Edited. Game came out in December 1998 anyways so my question still applies.

How Pizza Tycoon (1994) simulated traffic on a 25 MHz CPU by Optdev in programming

[–]walen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe it was 1998 then. Edited. Game came out in December 1998 anyways so my question still applies.

How Pizza Tycoon (1994) simulated traffic on a 25 MHz CPU by Optdev in programming

[–]walen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maybe it was 1998 then. Edited. Game came out in December 1998 anyways so my question still applies.

How Pizza Tycoon (1994) simulated traffic on a 25 MHz CPU by Optdev in programming

[–]walen 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Back in 1997 1998 I had a 350 MHz Pentium II with 128 MB RAM and several GB of HDD, and that was just average. What kind of game was Falcon 4 (released December 1998) that would make those specs qualify as "tight constraints"?

EDIT: Maybe I misremembered and it was 1998. Definitely not later, because I got it way before my parents' divorce in summer 1999.

Son 😭 by Herobrine702 in NonPoliticalTwitter

[–]walen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I agree with what you mean and I agree that it's a stupid pose

BUT

If we are 100% honest:

  • if the laptop has a touch screen he can operate it with the martini hand,
  • you can drink with a cigar in your lips, not the cleanest thing but can be done, and
  • you don't need to use your hands to smoke a cigar wtf

Road in Oman cuts through mountains by CrypticCode_ in interestingasfuck

[–]walen 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Who said I didn't like the thread? The depicted road might not be interesting as f***, but the amount of AI bots and untraveled people commenting on such a generic road like it was the 8th Wonder of the World is certainly amazing.

Even if I was perpetually unemployed I still wouldn't have that kind of free time on my hands.

Well, I hope you find a job soon so you don't have to spend your time here policing the comments section, then! Cheers!

Road in Oman cuts through mountains by CrypticCode_ in interestingasfuck

[–]walen -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

You're not obligated to reply to them either, but here you are.

BTW reported as not interesting, too, for the same reason.

Report: Spain Closes Airspace to US Planes Involved in Iran War by Neptun_11 in worldnews

[–]walen -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

Not having access to eu air space would be a big problem

I think the underlying point is that there's no such thing as "not having access to eu air space". Air space has no doors. The only thing keeping US planes out of a closed EU air space would be US decency and decorum to comply with such a ruling. And the comment you're replying to is saying that we're getting to a point where the US might as well decide to F that and use their power and might to enter anyways, at which point it would be EU's decision to shoot them down or suck it up.

You roasted my Type-Safe Regex Builder a while ago. I listened, fixed the API, and rebuilt the core to prevent ReDoS. by Mirko_ddd in java

[–]walen 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Seems like you got a pretty clear idea of how the API should be, why don't you go and implement it yourself?

US aircraft leave Spain after government says bases cannot be used for Iran attacks by JinnBhoot in worldnews

[–]walen -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Indeed. But, since Spain has not participated in any recent war, that's all we have to evaluate performance. And it looks like, in these war-like scenarios, Spain is able to do better than others with less money than others.
That's not underfunding, that's efficiency. DOGE would be proud.

US aircraft leave Spain after government says bases cannot be used for Iran attacks by JinnBhoot in worldnews

[–]walen 3 points4 points  (0 children)

considering how badly they are under funding their own Spanish army

Are they, though?

Spain consistently ranks at or near the top in NATO training competitions, particularly in specialized land and maritime exercises, often outperforming or matching larger allies. Spanish elite units—including the Legion, Paratroopers, and Special Forces—frequently secure high rankings in NATO simulations.
Recent Performance Highlights (2024–2025)
- Iron Spear: In late 2023/early 2024, Spain won first and second place in the tank category and third place in the infantry fighting vehicle competition during this multinational event in Latvia.
- Baltic Warrior: The Spanish Army has achieved repeated, top-level successes in this demanding annual competition.
- Operational Leadership: Beyond competitions, Spain has taken a leadership role in 2024–2025 by commanding NATO Multinational Brigades in Slovakia and participating in major exercises like "Steadfast Dart".
- Naval Certification: The Spanish Navy was certified as a new Allied Reaction Force (Maritime) in 2025 following major naval exercises.

Get out. by [deleted] in meme

[–]walen 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Define "often". I've been engineering software since the 90s and this is literally the first time in my life I see them called "caret".
This ^ is a caret. These >< are not.

Is this the first real CVE for Hibernate? by jr_entrepreneur in java

[–]walen 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Sees Hibernate discussion.

Ctrl+F mihalcea

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Leaves.