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1 2004-05-29.txt:07:25:26: <Toreun> it's surprisingly a lot of fun
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2 2004-06-04.txt:16:30:54: <fizzie> hm, lang's been surprisingly active lately.
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3 2004-06-11.txt:22:32:25: <lament> it's surprisingly efficient.
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4 2004-11-07.txt:22:32:14: <fizzie> apparently he keeps finding composite-number-factoring algorithms at a surprisingly high rate. :p
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5 2005-05-13.txt:09:02:27: <pgimeno> that's how I've managed to recover the True distribution (which is based, quite unsurprisingly, in False)
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6 2005-05-13.txt:18:09:31: <puzzlet> surprisingly Wikipedia had launched hieroglyph support
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7 2005-06-19.txt:19:02:31: <Keymaker> it's surprisingly time-consuming to write that kind of program. the hardest part is to keep switching windows to look at wikipedia article etc..
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8 2005-07-27.txt:23:29:09: <fizzie> For a laptop it's surprisingly nice.
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9 2005-11-26.txt:20:53:14: <jix> my div routine is surprisingly compact...
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10 2005-12-03.txt:10:52:08: <int-e> Keymaker: the problem is surprisingly tricky for brainfuck
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11 2006-04-17.txt:16:24:13: <calamari> openoffice's export to pdf works surprisingly well
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12 2006-04-28.txt:22:28:48: <GregorR-W> The Intel graphics cards are surprisingly decent, all things considered.
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13 2006-07-27.txt:23:27:13: <ihope> It's surprisingly easy to to double those short words ;-)
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14 2006-08-11.txt:03:47:06: <RodgerTheGreat> seriously, though, that's a surprisingly successful translation.
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15 2006-08-22.txt:00:56:56: <Razor-X> Wow. That's surprisingly good.
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16 2006-09-02.txt:05:40:13: <ifndef_GREGOR_H> ivan`: This is surprisingly good for being raw IRC :P
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17 2006-10-01.txt:21:24:25: <oerjan> no, surprisingly not i am just guessing how it works
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18 2007-01-03.txt:07:17:23: <CakeProphet> not surprisingly.
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19 2007-01-18.txt:02:51:16: <CakeProphet> it sounds feasible... surprisingly.
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20 2007-02-19.txt:01:10:06: <SevenInchBread> yes, unsurprisingly, the mathematics behind music is pure mathematics... however there's obviously something missing from a mathematical model.
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21 2007-02-25.txt:02:12:59: <oerjan> and more surprisingly, it actually manages to run the Malbolge cat program.
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22 2007-03-21.txt:03:54:20: <oerjan> This surprisingly gives it some of the advantages of lazy evaluation.
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23 2007-04-08.txt:03:49:33: <SevenInchBread> we can easily be esoteric (and Discordian... which works SURPRISINGLY well with esoteric) in the emergent behavior of our stale and bland platform
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24 2007-05-31.txt:23:21:16: <oerjan> it was an auxiliary Germanish language that we discussed on the conlang mailing list years ago. I am surprised to see it has a (disputed notability) Wikipedia article, and (not as surprisingly) has split into several versions.
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25 2007-06-20.txt:04:36:44: <oerjan> surprisingly, the answer was yes.
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26 2007-06-25.txt:19:32:41: <oerjan> i read learning russian was on the way up in finland, or something, unsurprisingly.
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27 2007-06-30.txt:01:07:33: <ihope> ndiswrapper was surprisingly painless.
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28 2007-07-07.txt:08:05:10: <edwardk> they can't be proven in general, but surprisingly many can
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29 2007-08-01.txt:01:45:15: <lament> which is surprisingly not far from the truth
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30 2007-09-10.txt:00:30:02: <oerjan> although the equality of the two numbers have seen surprisingly little investigation, being mentioned in only 3% of the articles on the subject.
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31 2007-09-13.txt:07:46:09: <_D6Gregor1RFeZi> Surprisingly, VESA /did/ work at 24bpp 8-O
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32 2007-10-25.txt:16:36:46: <ais523> surprisingly most of them weren't very interested
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33 2007-11-01.txt:16:38:15: <GregorR> A long time ago, in a galaxy surprisingly nearby (here, in fact), somebody asked if Brainfuck can access the Win32 API.
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34 2007-11-17.txt:18:06:15: <ehird`> "The approach is surprisingly simple: for each line of code you enter, we compile a shared object in the background. If the compilation succeeds, the object is loaded into a child process via dlopen(). If the child process segfaults, we know that the code was bad and so we can "rewind" by replaying all n-1 steps. Printing variables is handled by attaching gdb to the child process."
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35 2007-12-28.txt:01:48:22: <Slereah-> It's surprisingly hot in here.
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36 2007-12-28.txt:22:13:06: <Hiato> hrmm... no (unsurprisingly)
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37 2008-01-04.txt:18:26:32: <Slereah> Yes. and unsurprisingly, it's in the m combinator section.
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38 2008-01-06.txt:15:13:25: <Hiato> unsurprisingly, I am not surpirised
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39 2008-03-20.txt:16:34:54: <Deewiant> unsurprisingly
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40 2008-03-20.txt:16:36:23: <Deewiant> unsurprisingly there's no info on the net about running oak draw on windows xp >_<
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41 2008-04-11.txt:21:41:46: * oerjan finds oko utterances surprisingly short for having such low entropy per character :D
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42 2008-04-27.txt:23:28:26: <evincar> The imterpreter is surprisingly difficult to make.
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43 2008-06-08.txt:15:52:49: <ais523> registered in Russia, unsurprisingly
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44 2008-06-17.txt:18:00:52: <ais523> heh, unsurprisingly, spreadfirefox.com is down
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45 2008-06-24.txt:19:49:52: <ais523> C-INTERCAL's surprisingly robust against everything but call stack tricks
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46 2008-07-05.txt:17:09:21: <Deewiant> surprisingly handy
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47 2008-07-06.txt:16:40:17: <oerjan> surprisingly hot
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48 2008-08-08.txt:20:07:16: <tusho> (Perhaps surprisingly,) it's annoying.
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49 2008-08-15.txt:13:20:55: <oerjan> i suppose T&R has surprisingly few math jokes for having polygons as the main characters
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50 2008-08-20.txt:17:22:56: <Deewiant> and he did, surprisingly quickly too :-P
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51 2008-09-02.txt:19:31:08: <oerjan> AnMaster: Oscar Wilde did surprisingly well without one
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52 2008-09-04.txt:20:02:09: <fizzie> "Surprisingly" the name "zzie" was not taken.
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53 2008-09-07.txt:08:25:14: <oerjan> surprisingly, some people are awake
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54 2008-09-17.txt:20:44:43: <fizzie> fungot: You're being surprisingly coherent today.
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55 2008-09-17.txt:21:40:48: <fizzie> That's surprisingly small.
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56 2008-09-21.txt:13:11:35: <HanDongSeong> surprisingly there are also many atheists here
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57 2008-09-22.txt:17:39:02: <ais523> the code for it is surprisingly readable as it has pretty much nothing to do with brainfuck
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58 2008-09-23.txt:21:37:58: <tusho> unsurprisingly it fails in lynx
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59 2008-09-28.txt:21:36:50: <fizzie> I think all we got out of that one was few minutes of pointlessness, unsurprisingly.
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60 2008-10-16.txt:08:41:14: <immibis> it seems to give surprisingly relevant answers
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61 2008-10-23.txt:09:57:43: <fizzie> fungot: That was surprisingly text-like.
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62 2008-10-23.txt:09:58:58: <fizzie> That's surprisingly legible.
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63 2008-10-26.txt:19:57:04: <fizzie> Actually the current data-set, even though it's so tiny, works surprisingly well: http://zem.fi/~fis/botconv.txt
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64 2008-10-27.txt:20:57:37: <fizzie> In the wiki there's also "Another Pi Language", where the source code is two arbitrary integers; first is the index in pi and second is the amount of digits to read; that is then interpreted as "source file of any language". Unsurprisingly unimplemented.
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65 2008-10-31.txt:23:58:03: <fizzie> ehird: Suggested emacs, surprisingly.
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66 2008-11-13.txt:17:01:25: <Deewiant> Unsurprisingly enough :-P
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67 2008-11-21.txt:23:35:48: <oklo> surprisingly easy to read considering finland very rarely has any link between a's and รค's
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68 2008-12-05.txt:18:25:36: <oerjan> surprisingly that term does not exist yet
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69 2008-12-07.txt:16:26:25: * SimonRC is in a surprisingly bad mood
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70 2008-12-21.txt:23:17:16: <fizzie> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_micronations is surprisingly long.
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71 2008-12-28.txt:17:15:48: <ais523> surprisingly
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72 2008-12-31.txt:21:10:56: <psygnisfive> Madagascar 2 was a good movie, surprisingly
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73 2009-01-04.txt:18:13:20: <ais523> although "what am intelligence" seems surprisingly philosophical
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74 2009-01-07.txt:12:50:17: <fizzie> Path names are indeed surprisingly short.
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75 2009-01-08.txt:17:11:38: <fungot> AnMaster: i tried both gambit 4b13 and gambit 4b15, and surprisingly, the picture that won fnord ascii art contest wasn't even ascii art.
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76 2009-01-09.txt:23:04:35: <fizzie> There seem to be quite many Polish distributions in there; surprisingly.
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77 2009-01-09.txt:23:04:42: <ehird> fizzie: or, rather, not surprisingly
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78 2009-01-11.txt:09:29:02: <fungot> oklopol: ut austin too, not surprisingly though. ;p fnord/ fnord/ posse/ fnord/ esoteric not found
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79 2009-01-11.txt:19:01:49: <ehird> that's surprisingly common in programming.
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80 2009-01-13.txt:18:01:40: <Deewiant> which is unsurprisingly what's under localhost in /etc/hosts
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81 2009-01-14.txt:18:33:42: <ehird> a2p is surprisingly competent
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82 2009-01-18.txt:02:18:16: <kerlo> (((s k) a) b), surprisingly, gives this: b
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83 2009-01-18.txt:14:51:18: <ehird> (it's surprisingly short, 5-6 or so elements)
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84 2009-01-18.txt:19:25:47: <ais523> I actually used to be pretty good at VB once, surprisingly
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85 2009-01-18.txt:22:05:50: <ehird> ais523: unsurprisingly, Python is not optimized for entering code over IRC.
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86 2009-02-06.txt:15:54:12: <leeguy92> ,[>,] i discovered brainfuck can be surprisingly compact
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87 2009-02-14.txt:15:48:49: <ehird> ais523: that's surprisingly ugly/hacked up for a google logos
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88 2009-02-21.txt:15:02:52: <ais523> hmm... Dolphin is reminding me surprisingly of Nautilus
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89 2009-02-22.txt:00:09:41: <ehird> which is surprisingly cheap
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90 2009-02-23.txt:16:41:27: <ais523> looks surprisingly complex
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91 2009-03-01.txt:09:54:21: <fizzie> Echoing is surprisingly complicated.
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92 2009-03-03.txt:14:55:47: <ais523> surprisingly, CLC-INTERCAL would parse that just fine, C-INTERCAL might have more trouble
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93 2009-03-04.txt:17:20:24: <ehird> wow, my malloc() returns surprisingly clean results. like 0x200000
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94 2009-03-05.txt:15:34:28: <ais523> this is actually surprisingly like writing INTERCAL
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95 2009-03-05.txt:17:53:07: <ais523> most of the answers are surprisingly sane
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96 2009-03-12.txt:14:59:34: <fizzie> Fujitsu Siemens is partially German (the Siemens side, surprisingly) and they manufacture computers.
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97 2009-03-13.txt:20:15:41: <fizzie> That's surprisingly modern, given that triangles is what they draw nowadays too.
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98 2009-03-15.txt:20:43:47: <ehird> AnMaster: I don't actually give a damn whether you watch it or not, surprisingly.
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99 2009-03-27.txt:20:33:28: <AnMaster> Deewiant, fungot uses surprisingly much of the stuff actually, apart from stack stacks
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100 2009-03-31.txt:14:13:56: <Deewiant> cfunge chokes as badly as CCBI on Mycology, unsurprisingly
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101 2009-04-01.txt:23:21:08: <ais523> Gracenotes: #IRP is actually surprisingly active today
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102 2009-04-06.txt:01:57:21: <oerjan> surprisingly hard to find, the spanish is compresiones
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103 2009-04-07.txt:21:33:06: <Deewiant> (Unsurprisingly enough)
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104 2009-04-08.txt:20:14:57: <ehird> AnMaster: very low, surprisingly.
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105 2009-04-09.txt:22:32:45: <fizzie> Well, it's nice that it's someone else who's had to think about how to port that sigsegv handling; there seem to be some specialization involved for almost all (os, architecture) pairs in it. Also it doesn't do what I want in jitfunge (not surprisingly, since it's such a peculiar need), which is to fake the stack underflow so that it skips the faulting instruction, "returns" a zero, and counteracts the effect of any instructions that moved the stack pointer.
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106 2009-04-11.txt:21:15:22: <ehird> When I was young and naive I was looking around my computer and thought thermal paste was unwanted gunge, so I scraped it all off. Surprisingly, it never caught fire.
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107 2009-04-17.txt:18:53:14: <Deewiant> Unsurprisingly enough
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108 2009-04-24.txt:16:35:04: <fizzie> Surprisingly the Culture books produced reasonably funny-sounding output; but I already have so many "normal authors" there.
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109 2009-04-26.txt:16:02:50: <ais523> surprisingly, Cuil's results are slightly better than Google's in that respect
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110 2009-04-26.txt:20:03:01: <Deewiant> Unsurprisingly.
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111 2009-04-26.txt:20:03:12: <AnMaster> why "Unsurprisingly"
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112 2009-04-27.txt:18:19:25: <ais523> which strikes me as surprisingly low given Moore's Law
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113 2009-05-07.txt:04:50:35: <GregorR> I'm using oocalc. It works surprisingly well, and can even save without needing any further modifications to get it in the target form if you know how to ask it right, but it's a bit of a PITA because you can't just type, you have to press an arrow after every key.
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114 2009-05-08.txt:20:24:44: <Deewiant> Unsurprisingly, doing SSD alignment on an HD isn't very smart :-P
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115 2009-05-08.txt:20:40:36: <Deewiant> Lilja's there, unsurprisingly; he's a Haskell guy
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116 2009-05-27.txt:20:04:59: <ehird> 8192, which is surprisingly small. But Deewiant, I want to know how many calls, on average.
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117 2009-05-28.txt:07:41:34: <myndzi> i suspect that perhaps, given the right goal, brainfuck and a small set of random characters might be surprisingly flexible
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118 2009-05-30.txt:19:09:12: <ehird> AnMaster: unsurprisingly, you're the only one it bothers.
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119 2009-05-31.txt:08:06:43: <Patashu> 2/3 weave is surprisingly good still
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120 2009-06-01.txt:10:29:33: <GregorR-L> Unsurprisingly, we're using the version ais made.
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121 2009-06-01.txt:10:52:40: <GregorR-L> It tasted mostly like (presumably my own) blood, surprisingly sweet, with a little bit of bitterness.
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122 2009-06-07.txt:00:11:25: <Lune-aVulff> ehird: Most of them are surprisingly lame :(
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123 2009-06-10.txt:22:45:54: <GregorR> ehird: Not yet. Surprisingly difficult to take full-body photos of oneself :P
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124 2009-06-12.txt:00:12:49: <GregorR> http://filebin.ca/tgruta/AgonizedlyChunkySonata.mid // this is a surprisingly accurate name :P
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125 2009-06-18.txt:04:45:26: <oklopol> i'm writing a textbox atm, making a pretty correspondence between logical and physical lines is surprisingly difficult.
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126 2009-06-23.txt:18:06:23: <Deewiant> Unsurprisingly, it devotes 18 lines to defining fst,snd,trd,frth,ffth for tuples up to size 5
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127 2009-07-10.txt:23:26:48: <oerjan> surprisingly close...
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128 2009-07-13.txt:01:55:16: <Warrigal> I'm finding it surprisingly difficult to make a cat interpreter.
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129 2009-07-20.txt:22:09:40: <ehird> google, unsurprisingly, can has a logo
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130 2009-07-25.txt:22:42:28: <oklopol> but it takes surprisingly little effort to learn to be happy
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131 2009-07-28.txt:01:28:49: <ehird> Surprisingly, statistically, NOBODY DOES THAT.
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132 2009-08-05.txt:01:30:20: <oerjan> surprisingly nothing to do with piercing.
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133 2009-08-06.txt:18:17:28: <oklopol> i mean writing a brainfuck interp without parsing is actually surprisingly error prone
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134 2009-08-10.txt:16:46:19: <olegfink> surprisingly, it seems that it's the other way around
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135 2009-08-12.txt:19:19:43: <oklopol> GregorR-L: surprisingly many, unfortunately!
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136 2009-08-14.txt:19:54:06: <ehird> acme works surprisingly well on os x
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137 2009-08-15.txt:02:35:19: <ehird> there surprisingly aren't any...
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138 2009-08-26.txt:22:34:15: <ehird1> surprisingly, moving /lib doesn't break things.
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139 2009-09-01.txt:06:46:54: <ehird> Surprisingly, a shiny new CPU with like 20% performance improvements does not alleviate the crippling slowness of bash and bashfunge.
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140 2009-09-03.txt:21:39:51: <ehird> surprisingly, my partition surgery worked perfectly, first time
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141 2009-09-03.txt:23:09:19: <ehird> [22:39] ehird: surprisingly, my partition surgery worked perfectly, first time
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142 2009-09-03.txt:23:10:25: <Deewiant> 2009-09-03 23:39:57 ( ehird) surprisingly, my partition surgery worked perfectly, first time
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143 2009-09-04.txt:03:51:26: <ehird> it's...surprisingly snappy
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144 2009-09-12.txt:06:01:57: <ehird> unsurprisingly, it's to run a flight simulator
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145 2009-09-12.txt:10:57:55: <ehird> That's surprisingly recent for cygwin :P
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146 2009-09-13.txt:11:50:55: <fizzie> nasm, to be precise; surprisingly enough it didn't interpret "0123" as octal, wanted a "0o" prefix there.
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147 2009-09-17.txt:21:19:47: <Deewiant> In Python, + concatenates; in Perl, it unsurprisingly adds two numbers :-P
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148 2009-09-21.txt:22:45:26: <ehird> Surprisingly enough, most applications are unlike a web browser.
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149 2009-09-21.txt:22:48:13: <ehird> Surprisingly enough, it's called a default because it's not appropriate in ALL cases.
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150 2009-09-22.txt:10:18:26: <fizzie> Well, the SoftwareStore wiki page has renamed categories into "Departments", such as you would find from a physical store; I guess they're driving for that sort of metaphor. Except you only shoplift and never pay. (Well, the word "shoplift" surprisingly isn't mentioned there.)
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151 2009-09-23.txt:15:31:29: <ehird> AnMaster: Surprisingly, the general population don't give a shit: they're sitting at horrible 16"-18" Acer laptops with a damn number pad and an uber-glossy 16:9 screen.
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152 2009-10-01.txt:04:25:12: <hekau> surprisingly they made heavy use of occult symbolism
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153 2009-10-05.txt:11:12:04: <ehird> and hobbyists, surprisingly, don't find porting every new feature to 3.11 fun
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154 2009-10-06.txt:23:53:11: <oerjan> the rest is surprisingly close
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155 2009-10-09.txt:07:26:22: <Rugxulo> surprisingly
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156 2009-10-09.txt:13:30:16: <ehird> the wikipedia tab is surprisingly capable, handles infoboxes and everything just fine
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157 2009-10-18.txt:22:45:44: <Sgeo> "Sgeo" is surprisingly not rare
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158 2009-10-22.txt:03:32:23: <ehird> Oranjer: Surprisingly no!
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159 2009-10-22.txt:04:01:22: <ehird> Well that's... surprisingly honest.
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160 2009-10-24.txt:18:16:22: <ais523> /dev/env in DJGPP was surprisingly useful
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161 2009-10-24.txt:18:23:59: <AnMaster> <ais523> /dev/env in DJGPP was surprisingly useful <-- eh
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162 2009-10-26.txt:18:23:15: <ehird> The images themselves can be either .WIM images (as used in Vista), or .VHD (as used in Virtual PC). The ability to use VHD images allows the same image to be used across both virtual and physical hardware. Using a VHD with physical hardware depends on a new Windows 7 feature that allows direct booting from a VHD file; as a consequence, only Windows 7 (and Windows Server 2008 R2) can be deployed in this way. Manually deploying VHD images is surprisingly si
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163 2009-11-01.txt:11:30:16: <Pthing> it is surprisingly (except not because it's pretty richly structured) melodic
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164 2009-11-01.txt:11:37:39: <Pthing> if it were orchestrated properly, it would sound surprisingly good for all that it is entirely algorithmic
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165 2009-11-02.txt:07:45:05: <ehird> That was surprisingly easy
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166 2009-11-04.txt:23:47:51: <Gregor> Seems good enough, surprisingly *shrugs*
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167 2009-11-12.txt:23:29:30: <Rugxulo> compresses to 21k .ZIP (unsurprisingly)
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168 2009-11-23.txt:02:41:25: <ehird> That's pretty high at the top, and I can tell you that the type system hindered and bothered me a lot, and helped me surprisingly few times in comparison.
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169 2009-12-01.txt:22:34:19: <ais523> that would actually be surprisingly easy
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170 2009-12-01.txt:22:47:35: <ais523> AnMaster: gcc-bf is surprisingly efficient, on an RLE system
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171 2009-12-20.txt:02:06:02: <ehirdiphone> iPhone typing is, surprisingly, not instantaneous.
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172 2009-12-31.txt:23:58:42: <ehirdiphone> iPhone does not do ntp surprisingly enough
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173 2010-01-02.txt:11:25:11: <ais523> for a while I was on a bed-at-7, wake-at-2 pattern, which is surprisingly nice
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174 2010-01-06.txt:00:49:22: <ineiros> uorygl: Swedish is surprisingly easy (even though my Swedish is extremely rusty, since I don't use it at all).
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175 2010-01-08.txt:14:33:37: <ehird> XP handles being lobotomised surprisingly well.
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176 2010-01-08.txt:15:41:34: <ehird> That was surprisingly painless
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177 2010-01-09.txt:15:44:17: <ehird> although winhugs is surprisingly nice
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178 2010-01-10.txt:16:31:47: <ehird> AnMaster: Surprisingly enough, I don't care about your opinions.
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179 2010-01-15.txt:10:34:20: <ais523> yes, surprisingly so
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180 2010-01-26.txt:00:05:08: <Gregor> Finding non-crappy trumpet soundfonts. Surprisingly difficult.
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181 2010-01-26.txt:22:05:42: <Deewiant> I'm missing all of those too, unsurprisingly enough. (And a few dozen others.)
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182 2010-02-15.txt:01:23:32: <oerjan> surprisingly rarely
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183 2010-02-25.txt:15:33:06: <fizzie> It was a bit tricky to interface with on the TI DSP board; despite being made by the same company, "surprisingly" the rather advanced (or at least feature-rich) serial communications circuitry wasn't really helpful for that sort of stuff.
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184 2010-03-02.txt:14:02:10: <fungot> fizzie: an elven cloak: the hitchhiker's guide to the moonlight and the cimmerian. they are found in many places, not surprisingly, are large, dark shape rose from the chaos and gave it to open locked doors.
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185 2010-03-03.txt:20:36:06: <fizzie> anmaster_l: Do you happen to know Erlang's actual bignum format, by the way? I only know how GMP does it, and that particular library has a (surprisingly small) MAX_BIGNUM.
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186 2010-03-12.txt:18:38:25: <Deewiant> AnMaster: Only on POSIX, unsurprisingly enough.
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187 2010-03-15.txt:01:03:56: <augur> and this algorithm works _surprisingly_ well
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188 2010-03-28.txt:15:45:15: <alise_> Now I'm trying to prove (~ exists n, forall m, n >= m); it's surprisingly difficult.
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189 2010-04-02.txt:01:23:34: <mibygl> Wow, it's surprisingly difficult to create a user from the command line in OS C.
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190 2010-04-02.txt:01:26:05: <AnMaster> <mibygl> Wow, it's surprisingly difficult to create a user from the command line in OS C. <-- yeah, I heard it is all a chimera that OS .
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191 2010-04-02.txt:18:00:27: <ais523> seems surprisingly uncreative for Google
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192 2010-04-05.txt:04:28:40: <oklopol> boolean algebras i had heard of, surprisingly enough
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193 2010-04-09.txt:16:50:42: <Deewiant> vaeyl dies due to k not working as expected, unsurprisingly enough
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194 2010-04-09.txt:21:36:03: <Deewiant> Unsurprisingly enough
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195 2010-04-09.txt:22:57:31: <alise> Surprisingly, that first sentence is actually the correct way to phrase that with "you guys".
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196 2010-04-11.txt:18:48:42: <AnMaster> Deewiant, and surprisingly so does rcfunge!
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197 2010-04-13.txt:01:55:48: <Gregor> That site is both not Pen Island, and surprisingly penis-free. (Although not at all porn-free)
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198 2010-04-16.txt:22:18:46: <alise> The definition code is surprisingly nice. This is promising.
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199 2010-04-17.txt:23:56:57: <Rugxulo> huh, mandel.bf is slow also (surprisingly)
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200 2010-04-19.txt:18:13:37: <pikhq> AnMaster: Surprisingly? Many things do require C++.
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201 2010-04-29.txt:14:50:44: <fizzie> Misread an Amazon title recommendation as "Purely Fictional Data Structures". (Unsurprisingly, they were functional instead. I might have bought a book on fictional ones.)
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202 2010-05-01.txt:01:41:45: <ais523> wow, I'm surprisingly good at feeling generically angry
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203 2010-05-01.txt:02:01:48: <pikhq> It is, unsurprisingly, a char*.
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204 2010-05-04.txt:11:53:27: <fizzie> It has aspects of the farcical; after losing in court, they appeal and demand a jury trial; the court of appeals surprisingly-ishly agrees and grants that; the jury unanimously says the same thing the court did; so now they want either a special overrule-the-jury judgement, or a new jury, because "the jury simply got it wrong" (direct quote).
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205 2010-05-04.txt:18:07:16: <fizzie> AnMaster: the summer school thing was just a miscellaneous ad from my inbox. "Surprisingly" it wasn't related to novels in the book sense at all; was more about robotics and such.
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206 2010-05-06.txt:16:56:01: <pikhq> nooga: Surprisingly, it works quite decently when you treat it a bit like Japanese does.
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207 2010-05-08.txt:12:48:01: <alise> The end result is, surprisingly enough, custard.
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208 2010-05-11.txt:22:02:10: <AnMaster> Rugxulo, that looks surprisingly modern
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209 2010-05-12.txt:00:16:46: <oerjan> surprisingly integers have finite forms
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210 2010-05-16.txt:01:53:20: <pikhq> Worked surprisingly well, though.
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211 2010-05-22.txt:07:25:10: <Gregor> So I ran into a surprisingly ridiculous problem today.
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212 2010-05-23.txt:06:59:02: <Gregor> Incidentally, I am eating this Reuben with a Sangria (sin alcohol), which is a surprisingly good combination.
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213 2010-05-23.txt:20:39:12: <ais523> surprisingly little
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214 2010-05-28.txt:21:41:36: <Sgeo_> alise, a surprisingly large number
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215 2010-05-29.txt:21:25:32: <oerjan> it's surprisingly subtle how to do division
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216 2010-06-01.txt:03:11:28: <alise> Wow, that's a surprisingly low rate of fuckerrors.
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217 2010-06-06.txt:03:13:52: <alise> Surprisingly heavy!
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218 2010-06-07.txt:13:02:45: <oerjan> surprisingly, there are interesting consequences. if * is surjective, then it's essentially a kind of linear function, and all linear functions of two variables have this property.
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219 2010-06-18.txt:00:02:49: <ais523> I'm surprisingly bad with doors
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220 2010-06-19.txt:10:45:00: <oklopol> division is surprisingly hard
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221 2010-06-19.txt:20:28:12: <coppro> incidentally, I'm now disappointed I didn't find out about and join the PPCA earlier, because (unsurprisingly) I'm relatively moderate among members when it comes to my views
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222 2010-06-21.txt:20:54:45: <oerjan> and surprisingly the answer is "all of them, using only 5 possible passing-on values" (the 5 i deduced myself from the article)
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223 2010-06-27.txt:18:01:26: <fizzie> The Linux boot protocol is (surprisingly) well documented in Documentation/x86/boot.txt, though, so it's not hard to whip up a loader.
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224 2010-06-30.txt:23:02:36: <ehirdiphone> Which I fail surprisingly often at because I'm not given a calculator and mental arithmetic is so tedious that I cut corners.
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225 2010-07-01.txt:15:07:07: <ais523> come to think of it, JS and Lua are surprisingly similar languages
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226 2010-07-04.txt:02:04:50: <ais523> it comes up surprisingly often, but people don't recognise it
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227 2010-07-09.txt:05:20:46: <Gregor-P> Its tablet screen is surprisingly nice fo general navigation.
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228 2010-07-16.txt:22:22:57: <cpressey> zzo38: Hm, I do (I use NASM) but it's short (surprisingly short) so it'll be easy to convert.
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229 2010-07-26.txt:23:45:49: <cpressey> oerjan: It's surprisingly hard work, considering it's nothing.
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230 2010-07-30.txt:14:03:53: <cpressey> <alise> "And what has he done..." <-- wow, i find that surprisingly offensive in a way i cannot readily describe
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231 2010-08-01.txt:18:13:18: <fizzie> There's surprisingly many air-conditioning systems listed; I didn't even know those have remote control in general.
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232 2010-08-07.txt:00:48:42: <alise> "Ed stories" is a surprisingly long book.
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233 2010-08-12.txt:23:19:18: <fizzie> It's by a demoscene group, somewhat unsurprisingly.
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234 2010-08-15.txt:05:02:18: <Sgeo_> Also, it made surprisingly good plays
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235 2010-08-15.txt:18:45:44: <alise> This is a surprisingly active dlvl 1.
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236 2010-08-16.txt:08:11:53: <zzo38> And people often say my programs are surprisingly small. So therefore it is not that much surprise......
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237 2010-08-18.txt:01:13:53: <alise> RDJA is surprisingly /catchy/.
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238 2010-08-22.txt:20:40:15: <alise> Which is the most hacked-together yet surprisingly functional orgy ever.
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239 2010-08-29.txt:03:10:22: <alise> this works surprisingly well
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240 2010-09-06.txt:16:09:18: <cpressey> Unsurprisingly, the latest version of SIOD does not build out-of-the-box on Linux. This is unsurprising because the latest version of SIOD is from 1996.
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241 2010-09-12.txt:19:05:59: <alise> Monaco renders surprisingly well here.
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242 2010-09-19.txt:23:30:33: <Phantom_Hoover> And a pile of rust, which is really all that would remain of exposed structures after a surprisingly short time, is not very useful.
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243 2010-09-20.txt:20:37:39: <alise> Of course, this is fundamentally probabilistic in the end; it may do something obviously stupid simply because it was never stupid before, and that's unavoidable. Still, stupid heuristics have surprisingly high success rates, I find...
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244 2010-09-26.txt:15:31:19: <alise> Thus producing an ever-so-slightly broken but surprisingly-well-working 95-era interface on Win2k.
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245 2010-09-28.txt:18:49:50: <Phantom_Hoover> It's holding out surprisingly well...
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246 2010-10-06.txt:22:44:54: <alise> Surprisingly fast, too.
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247 2010-10-06.txt:23:01:29: <alise> http://benmetcalfe.com/blog/2010/10/the-ly-domain-space-to-be-considered-unsafe/ Using domains in the TLDs of countries you can't trust: surprisingly, a bad idea! trust
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248 2010-10-07.txt:14:02:38: <alise> This keyboard has surprisingly good tactile response for Logitech.
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249 2010-10-07.txt:14:09:09: <fizzie> "Several" was rather surprisingly many, if I remember the case right. Certainly not the majority, though.
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250 2010-10-07.txt:18:31:59: <alise> 1635 bytes of Python -- well, 1634, the newline at the end is irrelevant -- and, although it doesn't have monsters that actually fight you yet, it's surprisingly feature...ful
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251 2010-10-07.txt:19:14:18: <Gregor> Which is surprisingly annoying to extract.
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252 2010-10-07.txt:21:06:08: <ais523> also, it was a surprisingly non-eso project
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253 2010-10-08.txt:19:44:13: <alise> pikhq: $19.23/month, paid annually. Actually that's surprisingly cheap...
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254 2010-10-08.txt:20:56:13: <alise> surprisingly
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255 2010-10-09.txt:03:01:11: <alise> I HAVE READ SURPRISINGLY LITTLE THINGS THAT I SHOULD HAVE
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256 2010-10-10.txt:02:36:00: <alise> pikhq: Surprisingly, for a game released in 1997, it is *still regularly updated*.
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257 2010-10-14.txt:01:01:04: <elliott> There are surprisingly few interwikis on [[en:fuck]].
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258 2010-10-15.txt:00:28:24: <elliott> pikhq: Unsurprisingly, it doesn't work. At all.
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259 2010-10-15.txt:16:43:25: <cheater> surprisingly that has worked
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260 2010-10-16.txt:19:41:15: <pikhq> Sgeo: It's actually a reasonable security model, surprisingly.
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261 2010-10-16.txt:21:12:12: <olsner> his discoveries are all surprisingly recent too, I always thought the mandelbrot set and all that stuff was discovered in the 30s or something by a mandelbrot at least 50 years older than he actually was
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262 2010-10-16.txt:21:16:57: <elliott> <olsner> his discoveries are all surprisingly recent too, I always thought the mandelbrot set and all that stuff was discovered in the 30s or something by a mandelbrot at least 50 years older than he actually was
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263 2010-10-17.txt:22:53:09: <elliott> Surprisingly it's not hideous.
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264 2010-10-19.txt:00:37:31: <elliott> (which was a surprisingly complete vi-esque interface to Visual Studio)
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265 2010-10-19.txt:15:15:07: <catseye> ais523: i ...can't think of any, surprisingly
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266 2010-10-21.txt:20:31:00: <quintopia> elliott: surprisingly few worthy of mention tho. compared to GPL.
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267 2010-10-21.txt:22:12:08: <elliott> cpressey: i mean ruby is *surprisingly* close, but (1) THE FUCKING "COMMUNITY" and (2) it has a few really, really weird parts that just destroy it
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268 2010-10-22.txt:23:11:55: <quintopia> human after all was surprisingly good
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269 2010-10-23.txt:01:00:57: <elliott> surprisingly, i never had any bugs due to this.
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270 2010-10-24.txt:13:33:15: <Phantom_Hoover> Watching Gregor's corpse freefall is surprisingly relaxing.
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271 2010-10-25.txt:17:30:23: <fizzie> Looks surprisingly consistent.
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272 2010-10-26.txt:00:03:09: <elliott> Vorpal: They've got surprisingly few for being continuously maintained since 1993.
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273 2010-10-26.txt:05:57:56: <coppro> which Microsoft actually surprisingly beat them to
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274 2010-10-28.txt:20:56:03: <elliott> ...wow, that was surprisingly awesome
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275 2010-10-29.txt:02:54:07: <pikhq> Which, surprisingly, goes a long way in software.
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276 2010-10-31.txt:17:09:13: <catseye> Vorpal: it's not bad. renders the table on the main page surprisingly well
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277 2010-11-02.txt:06:39:52: <coppro> where our governments have a surprisingly strong 'old boss same as new boss' tendency
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278 2010-11-05.txt:04:12:40: <coppro> for a surprisingly weak acid
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279 2010-11-12.txt:20:20:59: <fizzie> Vorpal: Well, mine was a Wikipedia "Random article", unsurprisingly.
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280 2010-11-13.txt:17:35:06: <Gregor> elliott: Yeah, I see that, but that still seems surprisingly lacking in douchebaggery for Apple ...
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281 2010-11-22.txt:22:33:11: <oklopol> elliott: it's surprisingly hard to do anything, actually
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282 2010-11-28.txt:08:05:04: <Gregor> I'm actually of surprisingly few heritages for a person whose family on both sides has been in the US for more than a century.
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283 2010-11-28.txt:08:06:00: <pikhq> And I'm of surprisingly specifically-general heritage set.
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284 2010-11-29.txt:15:08:15: <ais523\unfoog> elliott: anyway, being well-connected is a surprisingly useful skill
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285 2010-12-03.txt:18:18:25: <quintopia> elliott: try the positional heuristic. i hear it's surprisingly good for how simple it is.
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286 2010-12-04.txt:17:34:27: <elliott> Surprisingly, it's smaller than cat...
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287 2010-12-04.txt:19:44:03: <Vorpal> Smmick, this channel is about esoteric programming languages, not esoterica btw. Surprisingly many get that wrong
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288 2010-12-06.txt:20:03:08: <ais523> and it's a surprisingly simple scheme, resembling gzip's but with a much better ratio
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289 2010-12-11.txt:02:53:22: <elliott> My eyes have adapted to staring at a computer screen for countless hours at a time. Surprisingly I don't need glasses and have better-than-average vision even after all these years...
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290 2010-12-15.txt:16:54:56: <elliott> ais523: anyway, the apply function is surprisingly neat!
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291 2010-12-15.txt:16:55:40: <elliott> ais523: http://sprunge.us/gZDO the guards are basically a half-assed excuse for not writing a proper validation function, and the do notation is unnecessary, but it's surprisingly simple
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292 2010-12-16.txt:14:26:00: <ais523> I spent ages reading Apple's guidelines about Objective C memory management; they were, surprisingly, exactly the same as Perl uses internally
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293 2010-12-16.txt:14:50:48: <ais523> and it's... surprisingly less irritating than I thought it would be
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294 2010-12-16.txt:16:48:15: <ais523> (which is, surprisingly, actually useful on occasion)
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295 2010-12-21.txt:00:22:06: <elliott> $(error Your work area is under a directory whose name contains a space. While it's possible to beat make into working with such directories, it's surprisingly hard and causes more problems than it solves. So, sorry, but don't do that)
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296 2010-12-23.txt:20:26:18: <elliott> that was surprisingly painless
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297 2010-12-24.txt:20:34:59: <elliott> asiek2erka: Um, because Christians went crusading to convert all the evil nonbelievers quite a while back and it worked surprisingly well ...?
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298 2010-12-24.txt:20:36:45: <elliott> Surprisingly effective.
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299 2010-12-31.txt:21:34:49: <Gregor> That worked surprisingly well for a typo.
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300 2011-01-04.txt:19:29:13: <Phantom_Hoover_> elliott, it's worked surprisingly well so far.
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301 [too many lines; stopping]
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