#archiveteam 2012-02-16,Thu

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Time Nickname Message
00:00 🔗 yipdw more seriously, I think we could actually use git-annex at my current workplace for versioning slide scans
00:00 🔗 yipdw or perhaps annotation data on that
00:00 🔗 yipdw slide scans are a few hundred megabytes each
00:01 🔗 chronomex that's kind of big
00:01 🔗 chronomex what sort of instrument do you use to scan?
00:01 🔗 yipdw they're massive, massive images
00:02 🔗 chronomex and what sort of originals?
00:02 🔗 yipdw I think
00:02 🔗 yipdw we're using a NanoZoomer 2.0 slide scanner here
00:03 🔗 yipdw on average, it's not quite as bad as a few hundred megabytes
00:03 🔗 yipdw but when you combine multiple focal planes with the highest image quality, yeah, it can get there
00:03 🔗 chronomex aha.
00:03 🔗 yipdw the idea is that you should capture enough data from the slide to permit diagnoses to be made from the capture
00:04 🔗 yipdw and the bar for that is "what a histologist can see through a microscope"
00:04 🔗 yipdw which is quite high :P
00:04 🔗 chronomex a friend and I have cobbled together a high-speed slide scanner, using a carousel slide projector + low wattage bulb + ground glass screen behind the slide, dslr where the projector lens normally lives
00:04 🔗 chronomex ahaha different slides :P
00:04 🔗 yipdw heh yeah
00:05 🔗 yipdw I forgot "slide" had another meaning
00:05 🔗 chronomex we've gotten really good results with a not-very-fancy camera
00:05 🔗 yipdw ah, here we go
00:05 🔗 yipdw http://sales.hamamatsu.com/en/products/system-division/virtual-microscopy/index.php?id=13222680
00:05 🔗 yipdw maximum resolution is 0.23 micrometers/piel
00:05 🔗 yipdw pixel
00:05 🔗 chronomex yow
00:05 🔗 yipdw so for a 26x76mm slide, yeah
00:05 🔗 yipdw work that out
00:06 🔗 yipdw generally the person scanning the slide will select a region of interest so that they don't have to wait forfuckingever to get an image
01:42 🔗 arrith http://torrentfreak.com/book-publishers-shut-down-library-nu-and-ifile-it-120215/
01:42 🔗 SketchCow According to the complaint, the sites offered users access to 400,000 e-books and made more than $11 million in revenue in the process.
01:42 🔗 SketchCow See.
01:42 🔗 SketchCow This is the thing.
01:43 🔗 SketchCow It is so hard for me to go "OH NO A DIGITAL LIBRARY OF ALEXANDRIA IS GONE"
01:43 🔗 SketchCow I work at one, thank you very much
01:43 🔗 arrith i'm just wondering if that stuff is really gone :(
01:43 🔗 arrith links that is
01:44 🔗 arrith if library.nu at least comes back in some form one could crawl it, but this was crazy-sudden
01:44 🔗 chronomex but THINK OF THE CHILDREN
01:44 🔗 SketchCow Oh I am
01:44 🔗 SketchCow OK, finished
01:45 🔗 * SketchCow zips up
01:45 🔗 SketchCow So, how long has git-annex been around?
01:45 🔗 SketchCow I had someone drop this on me, so it's all new, but obviously it is rather mature.
01:45 🔗 chronomex I think two years?
01:45 🔗 chronomex maybe three
01:47 🔗 arrith well their gitweb only goes back to 2010-10-09
01:48 🔗 arrith which is around the time articles about it started popping up
01:48 🔗 kennethre arrith: well that's 1/3rd the lifetime of git
01:48 🔗 kennethre so *a long time* suffices ;)
01:48 🔗 arrith git-annex is not some flaky script that was quickly thrown together. I wrote it in Haskell because I wanted it to be solid and to compile down to a binary. And it has a fairly extensive test suite. (Don't be fooled by "make test" only showing a few dozen test cases; each test involves checking dozens to hundreds of assertions.)
01:48 🔗 arrith from http://git-annex.branchable.com/not/
01:48 🔗 arrith the dev seems to be pretty capable is why i pasted that
01:49 🔗 chronomex that's about the time I first heard about it; I lurk on the vcs-home mailing list which is where it was announced iirc
01:50 🔗 chronomex arrith: I believe closure is joey hess, the author
01:50 🔗 arrith oh wow, that's neat
01:51 🔗 arrith 20 Oct 2010 is the earliest date in the debian changelog here: http://packages.debian.org/changelogs/pool/main/g/git-annex/git-annex_3.20120123/changelog
01:51 🔗 arrith so yeah i'm going with late 2010
01:51 🔗 chronomex seems reasonable
01:53 🔗 closure jesus 1/3 the lifetime of git?!
01:55 🔗 SketchCow What the fuck kind of time measurement is that.
01:55 🔗 SketchCow We'll be done with the project in .4 git-annex lifetimes
02:06 🔗 DFJustin all of library.nu's actual content was hosted on other filehost sites
02:07 🔗 chronomex like megaupload
02:07 🔗 chronomex we're fucked
02:08 🔗 arrith DFJustin: yeah, just need the links
02:08 🔗 arrith almost like tpb and magnet links
02:08 🔗 DFJustin but the alexandria comparisons are pretty silly because all of the stuff still exists in print in regular libraries
02:09 🔗 arrith although there is some information in torrent files that won't be available through magnet links alone, tracker urls for example
02:16 🔗 closure http://pastebin.com/NhA3VPhK ... I'm just saying
02:34 🔗 SketchCow https://plus.google.com/hangouts/extras/talk.google.com/jason's%2520incredibly%2520boring%2520clubhouse?authuser=0&hl=en&eid=
02:56 🔗 Archivis2 Blargh, I hate it when I have to repair my main desktop :(
02:56 🔗 Archivis2 At least this channel is publicly logged
02:59 🔗 Archivis2 closure: Been playing/learning about git-annex all evening
02:59 🔗 Archivis2 This is excellent!
02:59 🔗 Archivis2 Currently making a repo containing all archiveteam uploads on archive.org
03:00 🔗 Archivis2 (pointing to web remotes)
03:00 🔗 Archivis2 Mostly just to practice using it, but who knows, might be useful
03:01 🔗 Archivis2 closure: wrt "file sharing", isn't it just adding other people's remotes and vice versa?
03:01 🔗 Archivis2 (of course, they need to be trusted people since they need something like ssh access over git-annex-shell)
03:01 🔗 closure well yeah, basically
03:02 🔗 Archivis2 s/trusted/semi-trusted/
03:02 🔗 closure you can also put git repos on http:// and no logins needed
03:02 🔗 closure or some other things
03:02 🔗 Archivis2 yeah
03:02 🔗 Archivis2 But if you put repos on http, how would you also distribute the files?
03:02 🔗 closure by http
03:02 🔗 closure in the same directory
03:03 🔗 Archivis2 (Since they're not actually wrapped in the git repo)
03:03 🔗 Archivis2 Oh, okay, just curious
03:03 🔗 closure they're in .git/annex/objects/ which is accessible via http if you put .git up for http
03:03 🔗 Archivis2 I'm only familiar with using git daemon to clone
03:04 🔗 Archivis2 So if I git clone a repo, I end up with all the files that are "in" that copy of it at that time?
03:04 🔗 closure no, it ends up empty, you have to get the files you want in that clone
03:05 🔗 Archivis2 So, how would you do that over http?
03:05 🔗 Archivis2 Just make .got/annex/objects web accessible, and mirror it?
03:05 🔗 Archivis2 s/got/git/
03:06 🔗 closure you say "git annex get foo" and it goes and gets it, if you cloned from http:// it knows where to go
03:06 🔗 Archivis2 Oh, wow
03:06 🔗 Archivis2 That's rad!
03:06 🔗 Archivis2 Same with a clone over git://, or only http?
03:07 🔗 closure same with any clone, *except* for git:// actually
03:07 🔗 closure (because git:// protocol can't transfer arbitrary files)
03:07 🔗 closure but over ssh, sure
03:07 🔗 closure or rsync
03:07 🔗 Archivis2 Oh, okay.
03:08 🔗 Archivis2 What's the easiest way to expose a git repo over http?
03:08 🔗 Archivis2 (if you have an opinion)
03:08 🔗 closure well, I think you want to make a separate, bare repo, and there's this hook you have to enable. bit of a bother really
03:09 🔗 Archivis2 oh, I see
03:09 🔗 closure course for your repo of all the archiveteam stuff, you could just put it on github
03:09 🔗 Archivis2 yeah, 's what I planned to do
03:09 🔗 closure since you're telling it where to get all the files from the web
03:10 🔗 Archivis2 Since everything's web-remote
03:10 🔗 Archivis2 Yep :)
03:10 🔗 Archivis2 This is incredibly awesome, btw
03:10 🔗 chronomex that's sweet.
03:10 🔗 chronomex hmmm.
03:10 🔗 Archivis2 Athough now I'm wrestling cabal
03:10 🔗 chronomex looks like git-annex will solve some stupid problems I have
03:10 🔗 Archivis2 (trying to compile the latest git-annex, since the hackage version doesn't have the --file flag for addurl)
03:11 🔗 closure I'm not very fond of cabal.
03:11 🔗 closure with what version of ghc are you building it?
03:11 🔗 Archivis2 Could not deduce (Show a) arising from a use of `showHex'
03:11 🔗 Archivis2 Data/Digest/SHA2.hs:111:4:
03:11 🔗 Archivis2 [ 1 of 26] Compiling Data.Digest.SHA2 ( Data/Digest/SHA2.hs, dist/build/Data/Digest/SHA2.o )
03:11 🔗 Archivis2 bound by the instance declaration at Data/Digest/SHA2.hs:109:10-39
03:11 🔗 Archivis2 from the context (Integral a)
03:11 🔗 Archivis2 7.4.1
03:11 🔗 Archivis2 Latest
03:11 🔗 Archivis2 (the problem isn't in your thing, it's in one of the deps)
03:11 🔗 closure yeah, I had the same failre recently. Something broken there
03:12 🔗 Archivis2 did you work around it?
03:12 🔗 closure I can't remember
03:12 🔗 Archivis2 :P
03:12 🔗 Archivis2 I suppose I could build without hs3
03:13 🔗 closure yep
03:13 🔗 closure in fact, I think that's what I did.. git merge no-s3
03:15 🔗 Archivis2 I feel like I'm forgetting something dumb
03:15 🔗 Archivis2 V
03:15 🔗 Archivis2 0 3:15AM:abuie@abuie-dev:~/master 23266 Ï git merge no-s3
03:15 🔗 Archivis2 fatal: 'no-s3' does not point to a commit
03:16 🔗 closure wtf, you're underscor?
03:16 🔗 Archivis2 oh, yeah
03:16 🔗 Archivis2 sorry
03:16 🔗 closure try origin/no-s3
03:17 🔗 underscor Wheeeee
03:17 🔗 underscor Thanks
03:17 🔗 closure now SketchCow needs to come in here as overfiend or something, and our collection of name confusion would be complete
03:18 🔗 underscor haha
03:19 🔗 underscor oops, forgot pcre-light
03:19 🔗 underscor With addurl --fast, does WORM info get recorded?
03:20 🔗 underscor (I know you can't do a sha backend with fast, but I wasn't sure about worm)
03:21 🔗 closure with the new version and --fast, it records the file size. Which is basically all WORM does
03:21 🔗 closure it doesn't use that backend, but it's the same level of assurance (ie, not much)
03:22 🔗 closure note that you can always `git annex migrate` later and it will pull it down from the web and convert to a checksum
03:23 🔗 underscor Oh, okay, excellent
03:23 🔗 underscor jfeifjsepfjdpsfjdkfjweklfjsdcx
03:23 🔗 underscor git-annex: unrecognized option `--file=boingboing-2000-2005_files.xml'
03:24 🔗 closure git annex version?
03:25 🔗 underscor git-annex version: 3.20120124
03:25 🔗 underscor whoops
03:25 🔗 underscor My ruby $PATH and shell $PATH didn't match up
03:25 🔗 underscor Working now
03:26 🔗 underscor Heh, sorry
03:38 🔗 dcmorton is batcave available for rsync'ing mobileme users again? drive is getting dangerously full
03:38 🔗 closure someone drove the batmobile thru the wall of batcave, I hear there's a new bat location somewhere
03:40 🔗 underscor dcmorton: git pull
03:40 🔗 underscor then you can run the uploader
03:44 🔗 dcmorton underscor: got it.. thanks
03:44 🔗 underscor np
03:49 🔗 underscor closure: I'm imagining a giant git-annex repo with everything in archive.org
03:49 🔗 underscor :D
03:49 🔗 underscor That would be really neat
03:50 🔗 underscor I wonder how well it would scale to that though
03:50 🔗 underscor heh
03:52 🔗 closure you hit git scalability issues eventually
03:52 🔗 closure I've been working last 3 days in scaling git
03:52 🔗 closure git-annex to millions of files.. it does. but git, not so much :)
03:53 🔗 * closure has a directory with 300 copies of the linux kernel source tree in it. takes a while to rm
03:54 🔗 underscor haha
03:54 🔗 underscor Where does the problem in git lie?
03:54 🔗 closure yay for lvm, so I can just nuke the volume
03:54 🔗 underscor Just inefficiency with an index of millions of files?
03:54 🔗 closure oh, it keeps every file in .git/index and rewrites it all the time
03:55 🔗 closure some other stuff. Facebook was complaining about this, it seems their source tree is insane and too big for git
03:55 🔗 underscor haha
03:55 🔗 underscor damn
03:55 🔗 underscor hmm
03:55 🔗 underscor Is there a way to make this work?
03:55 🔗 underscor git annex addurl --fast --file=NUMBERS/geocities-3-d.7z.001 http://archive.org/download/2009-archiveteam-geocities-part1/NUMBERS/geocities-3-d.7z.001
03:56 🔗 closure what, to create the directory?
03:56 🔗 underscor Right now it spits out an angry error about a nonexistent directory
03:56 🔗 underscor Yeah
03:56 🔗 underscor I mean, I can write logic to create the directories, and cd in to each one, etcetera
03:56 🔗 underscor But that feels real clunky
03:58 🔗 closure will fix
03:58 🔗 underscor \o/
03:58 🔗 underscor Thanks!
04:00 🔗 underscor Out of curiosity, why'd you choose haskell?
04:00 🔗 underscor (I personally love the language, but I know there are others that don't agree)
04:05 🔗 closure fixed.
04:05 🔗 closure because it was time to learn haskell and also I wanted something solid
04:06 🔗 closure I didn't know you were into haskell
04:12 🔗 yipdw "a monoid is a monad in the category of endofunctors, what's the problem?"
04:12 🔗 yipdw er
04:12 🔗 yipdw monad -> monoid
04:13 🔗 yipdw whoops
04:13 🔗 underscor closure: Yeah, I got into it this summer when I was in summer residential governor's school
04:14 🔗 underscor one of my classes was mathematical problem solving, and haskell's lazy evaluation and excellent iterable abilities let me solve problems 20 times faster than anyone else in the class
04:14 🔗 underscor (who wasn't using haskell)
04:14 🔗 * closure hits yipdw with a typoclassopedia
04:14 🔗 underscor I haven't done anything beyond write math programs in it though
04:15 🔗 yipdw underscor: heh, that's about my exposure too -- I've been using it for Project Euler
04:15 🔗 yipdw for some weird reason
04:15 🔗 closure well damn, I wish I'd known, I could have had you slinging git-annex code
04:16 🔗 yipdw underscor: also, Paul Hudak's The Haskell School of Expression is most excellent
04:16 🔗 yipdw I will forever love fibs = 1:1:zipWith (+) fibs (tail fibs)
04:16 🔗 underscor Ooh, I'll have to check it out
04:16 🔗 underscor Yeah, that was the first problem we had to solve
04:16 🔗 underscor 10 thousandth fib number
04:17 🔗 underscor Only took me a few minutes, everyone else spent >45 minutes
04:17 🔗 underscor closure: Hehee
04:18 🔗 underscor I need to learn about how the rest of it works, though
04:18 🔗 underscor Like type declarations and stuff
04:18 🔗 closure hmm, I need to get ahold of the Haskell School of Expression
04:18 🔗 underscor My exposure's pretty much limited to fuckery in ghci
04:18 🔗 yipdw underscor: try executing fibs !! 10000 on that definition, it will fly
04:19 🔗 underscor I know :D
04:19 🔗 closure yeah, I've been starting to try to learn about dependant types and type level programming
04:19 🔗 yipdw on my Xeon it completes in something I can't measure
04:19 🔗 yipdw the reason why it works is also mind-boggling (to me anyway)
04:19 🔗 yipdw lazy evaluation up the ass
04:19 🔗 underscor fucking delicious :D
04:19 🔗 Coderjoe closure: is there a way to push git-annex files to another repository?
04:20 🔗 closure Coderjoe: git annex copy foo --to reponame
04:20 🔗 underscor Coderjoe: Yeah, git annex copy file --to remotename
04:20 🔗 closure after you set up a git remote for it
04:20 🔗 underscor closure: Damn :P
04:20 🔗 Coderjoe and what protocols does it handle?
04:20 🔗 Coderjoe and is there an ability to copy multiple files?
04:20 🔗 closure any protocol that can be used for a normal git remote (except git://) .. ssh, rsync, http
04:21 🔗 closure yes, foo can be a file or a directory
04:21 🔗 closure or any number of either
04:21 🔗 closure or leave it off to do the whole current directory :)
04:21 🔗 underscor You can push via http?
04:21 🔗 underscor Damn, never new that
04:21 🔗 underscor +k
04:22 🔗 closure um, no, you can't upload bia http
04:22 🔗 Coderjoe aw
04:22 🔗 closure well, I don't support WEBDAV yet at least..
04:22 🔗 Coderjoe because http can do it...
04:23 🔗 closure true, but server side it's a bit of a nightmare
04:23 🔗 underscor yipdw: closure: No Haskell School of Expression, but any other haskell books here catch your eye? http://hastebin.com/tahewokuco.coffee
04:23 🔗 underscor Sorry for the gross formatting
04:24 🔗 yipdw underscor: I haven't actually read any of those, though I did meet Bryan O' Sullivan at Erlang Factory once
04:24 🔗 yipdw he's a pretty swell guy
04:24 🔗 yipdw :P
04:24 🔗 yipdw so I guess his Real World Haskell book is probably good
04:24 🔗 underscor That's neat
04:24 🔗 closure I've been meaning to look at the Bird too
04:24 🔗 closure my name is in RWH :)
04:24 🔗 underscor I suppose I was coming more from do-you-want-a-copy-of-them
04:24 🔗 yipdw ohh
04:24 🔗 yipdw illicit
04:25 🔗 yipdw I SEE
04:25 🔗 yipdw hmm
04:25 🔗 closure um, Haskell School of expression is listed there :P
04:25 🔗 yipdw the thing I like about HSE is that it uses functional programming for applications that IMO one does not see very often
04:25 🔗 yipdw it actually focuses on FRP
04:25 🔗 underscor Woah, look how blind I am
04:25 🔗 yipdw which is pretty need for an introductory book
04:25 🔗 yipdw neat, too
04:25 🔗 underscor yipdw: Yeah, mildly illicit :P
04:26 🔗 underscor This is basically library.nu, except private
04:26 🔗 yipdw closure: you're cited in there?
04:26 🔗 closure reviewer
04:26 🔗 yipdw ahh neat
04:26 🔗 closure along with like 500 other people
04:27 🔗 Archivis2 Whoops, client crashed
04:28 🔗 underscor Oh, yeah, I remember seeing your name, closure
04:28 🔗 underscor I was like "I know that guy!"
04:28 🔗 underscor haha
04:28 🔗 underscor (yes, I'm that freak who reads all the reviews)
04:29 🔗 underscor http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/people/simonpj/papers/history-of-haskell/index.htm
04:29 🔗 underscor Looks interesting
04:30 🔗 closure yes, I enjoyed that one
04:30 🔗 yipdw Simon Peyton-Jones sounds like a supervillain's name
04:30 🔗 yipdw along with R. Kent Dybvig
04:30 🔗 closure Found:
04:31 🔗 closure Why not:
04:31 🔗 closure fmap a (getStale file)
04:31 🔗 closure getStale file >>= return . a
04:31 🔗 closure man, I love hlint
04:31 🔗 underscor jvdksvjlewjvldsjvkdjsvldsvlkds
04:31 🔗 closure you should find some SPJ talks. They're intorductory, but he's one of the best presenters I've ever seen
04:31 🔗 underscor It's unseeded right now
04:31 🔗 yipdw oh, hlint suggests alternative constructions?
04:31 🔗 underscor I'll link it when it finishes downloading
04:31 🔗 underscor Probably overnight
04:42 🔗 closure hmm, a <$> getStale file is better though. hlint must not like applicatives
04:51 🔗 underscor closure: yipdw: http://ksnd.it/dl/6613c98564e
04:51 🔗 underscor It's a djvu
04:53 🔗 closure expired request
04:53 🔗 underscor Weird
04:53 🔗 underscor One sec
04:53 🔗 DFJustin works here
04:53 🔗 underscor http://ksnd.it/v/6613c98564e
04:54 🔗 underscor ^ closure
04:54 🔗 DFJustin damn wasted too much time listening to jason, now I have to do things
04:55 🔗 underscor hahahah
04:55 🔗 underscor 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000001 -- web
04:55 🔗 underscor 85019413-6049-441c-a4a9-2f17dc0e734a -- here (ArchiveTeam Releases (@ IA))
04:55 🔗 underscor semitrusted repositories: 2
04:55 🔗 underscor untrusted repositories: 0
04:55 🔗 underscor dead repositories: 0
04:55 🔗 underscor local annex keys: 0
04:55 🔗 underscor local annex size: 0 bytes
04:55 🔗 underscor known annex keys: 276
04:55 🔗 underscor known annex size: 57 gigabytes
04:55 🔗 underscor backend usage:
04:55 🔗 underscor URL: 276
04:55 🔗 underscor closure: Working beautifully now with the directory fix
04:55 🔗 underscor Thanks!
04:56 🔗 closure personally, and especially for the archiveteam repo, I "git annex untrust web"
04:56 🔗 closure although if it's all archive.org urls, you *may* trust it :P
04:56 🔗 underscor hehe
04:56 🔗 underscor I planned on doing that, but after I add everything
04:57 🔗 underscor Not really for any particular reason, I suppose
04:57 🔗 underscor Makes it so I don't have to force on drop though
05:27 🔗 underscor Wow!
05:27 🔗 underscor where: &w_collection=*archiveteam* | size: 30,266,111,202 KB|
05:27 🔗 underscor That's incredible!
05:28 🔗 underscor Of course, mobileme will nearly increase it 10fold
05:28 🔗 underscor But still!
05:33 🔗 DFJustin kekekek
05:33 🔗 DFJustin what's the size of cdbbsarchive out of curiosity
05:35 🔗 underscor gimme a sec
05:35 🔗 underscor btw, this is where fos lives, if y'all are curious about stats
05:35 🔗 underscor http://ia700108.us.archive.org:8088/mrtg/
05:35 🔗 underscor You can see where someone started uploading mobileme
05:35 🔗 underscor probably dcmorton
05:35 🔗 underscor haha
05:36 🔗 underscor DFJustin: where: &w_collection=cdbbsarchive | size: 366,592,842 KB
05:36 🔗 underscor That would be pretty cool to have as a git-annex repo too
05:38 🔗 DFJustin hehe
05:39 🔗 underscor (Recording state in git...)
05:39 🔗 underscor 1 5:39AM:abuie@abuie-dev:~/cdbbsarchive 23540 Ï ruby ../ia_annex.rb Gold_II
05:39 🔗 underscor Gold_II is not a collection. It is, in fact, a software
05:39 🔗 underscor Mirroring Gold_II because its parent is cdbbsarchive
05:39 🔗 underscor addurl GOLD_II.cdr ok
05:39 🔗 underscor addurl GOLD_II.jpg ok
05:39 🔗 underscor Wheee
05:39 🔗 DFJustin git clone ALLSHAREWARE
05:39 🔗 underscor That's how it'll be once this finishes ;P
05:40 🔗 DFJustin guess this fulfills jason's wish for an easy way to download collections
05:40 🔗 underscor Yeah, assuming he likes it
05:40 🔗 underscor (ping SketchCow, so he sees it)
05:41 🔗 underscor Also need to write hooks that will automatically do junk when items within a collection are updated
05:41 🔗 underscor Need to see if they'll let me touch petabox code
05:41 🔗 underscor ;D
05:44 🔗 SketchCow They won't.
05:44 🔗 SketchCow But provide assistance.
05:45 🔗 underscor Quick, the boss is here
05:45 🔗 underscor Look busy!
05:45 🔗 underscor SketchCow: Yeah, I know. Hank and BK are still sore about that incident in October
05:45 🔗 underscor (rightfully so)
05:46 🔗 underscor DFJustin: SketchCow: 8 down, 800 to go! http://hastebin.com/cowotigili.hs
05:49 🔗 underscor closure: git-annex: /home/abuie/digibarn/.git/annex/tmp/remote_web_182_980_URL-s4619--http&c%%archive.org%download%DigibarnBruceDamerOnHowWilliamShatnerChangedTheWorldhistoryChannel%DigibarnBruceDamerOnHowWilliamShatnerChangedTheWorldhistoryChannel.thumbs%history-channel-shatner-digibarn-brucedamer__000390.jpg.log: openBinaryFile: invalid argument (File name too long)
05:49 🔗 underscor :(
05:52 🔗 closure ouch..
05:52 🔗 closure I will fix that tomorrow
05:54 🔗 DFJustin I guess to really have ALLSHAREWARE you'll want http://www.archive.org/details/tucows as well
05:54 🔗 DFJustin (the description on which is now out-of-date....)
05:54 🔗 underscor closure: <3
05:54 🔗 underscor Thanks!
05:54 🔗 underscor DFJustin: Yeah, I plan on doing it too
05:55 🔗 underscor But once I have an automation workflow in place
05:55 🔗 underscor Also, still wanting to hand-comb output for the time being
05:55 🔗 underscor :)
05:56 🔗 DFJustin they need to do another tucows pull too, "this just in...7 years ago"
05:56 🔗 DFJustin the site is amazingly still up
05:58 🔗 underscor wow
05:58 🔗 underscor that's pretty impressive
05:58 🔗 underscor I remember using tucows in like 2004
05:59 🔗 underscor back on my G3 AIO
05:59 🔗 underscor :D
05:59 🔗 underscor Fuckin' 10 years old
05:59 🔗 underscor hahaha
05:59 🔗 DFJustin I remember when "winsock software" actually meant something
06:00 🔗 underscor :o
06:00 🔗 underscor That was a while ago
06:00 🔗 underscor ;P
06:00 🔗 DFJustin but I'm still a whippersnapper compared to some folks in here :)
06:02 🔗 underscor Very true
06:02 🔗 underscor Man, I remember playing this game
06:02 🔗 underscor Damn, what was it called
06:02 🔗 underscor It was like, you pretended you were in a museum
06:02 🔗 underscor and there were all these puzzles and stuff you had to solve
06:03 🔗 underscor I remember that in 3rd grade START (gifted education) on Windows 95
06:03 🔗 underscor Man, now I really want to know what it was called >:|
06:05 🔗 DFJustin in 3rd grade we had apple IIs
06:05 🔗 underscor We had apple IIs until 2nd grade
06:05 🔗 closure underscor: fixed
06:06 🔗 underscor and then we got celerons with windows 95
06:06 🔗 underscor closure: :D
06:06 🔗 underscor We couldn't use "Batang" on those celerons
06:06 🔗 underscor It would crash the computer
06:06 🔗 underscor I remember that, too
06:06 🔗 underscor God, all these memories
06:07 🔗 underscor OMGOMGOMGOMGOMGOMG
06:07 🔗 underscor I FOUND IT
06:07 🔗 * underscor is so excited
06:07 🔗 underscor http://www.abandonia.com/en/games/479/Museum+Madness.html
06:07 🔗 closure is that a text adventure game?
06:08 🔗 underscor Nope, windows 3.11 and 95
06:08 🔗 underscor Man, I'm gonna have to set up a win95 vm so I can play this <3
06:09 🔗 underscor closure: Thanks again for fixing that bug
06:09 🔗 underscor Couldn't resist, eh? ;)
06:09 🔗 underscor Wow, lots of changes!
06:09 🔗 closure turned out to be easy, can just truncate and add a md5 for uniqueness
06:09 🔗 underscor oic
06:11 🔗 underscor http://www.amazon.com/Museum-Madness/dp/B0009U7CLQ
06:11 🔗 underscor ha ha
06:11 🔗 underscor prime eligible!
06:12 🔗 underscor Customers buy this item with The Oregon Trail, 5th Edition by The Learning Company Windows 98 / Me / 95, Mac
06:12 🔗 underscor Frequently Bought Together
06:12 🔗 underscor Hehehehehe
06:12 🔗 underscor I'm sure TONS of people have bought that combo lolololol
06:13 🔗 underscor closure: Works like a charm, many thanks!
06:54 🔗 Coderjoe underscor: so how big and unweildy is the git repo so far?
06:54 🔗 Coderjoe wow
06:54 🔗 Coderjoe 70-01-08.us is kinda overloaded O_o
07:03 🔗 underscor ha
07:03 🔗 underscor Coderjoe: http://hastebin.com/totedewice.hs
07:03 🔗 underscor Keep in mind that they're actually smaller than that, it's just in the middle of adding files
07:03 🔗 underscor (re the du)
07:08 🔗 Coderjoe seems like a lot of disk space for 1765 urls
07:09 🔗 yipdw would repacking help?
07:11 🔗 underscor Like I said, there are a bunch of temporary cruft laying around
07:11 🔗 underscor s/are/is/
07:11 🔗 underscor They're all adding files, which takes up space until they're dropped
07:12 🔗 yipdw PSA: Sleepytime tea + agave nectar = apotheosis of human creation
08:19 🔗 Coderjoe closure: btw, when you're opening files for hashing in git-annex, are you opening them with the noatime option?
08:19 🔗 Coderjoe http://kerneltrap.org/node/14148
08:22 🔗 cryptops1 someone here archived lachlan cranswick page, why can't i find it on the wiki under 'people' ?
09:00 🔗 yipdw oparty
09:01 🔗 SketchCow Hooray, I fixed the jamendo bug
09:01 🔗 SketchCow Asked Emjirp to help me find ones that messed up.
09:01 🔗 SketchCow Shouldn't be many.
09:01 🔗 Coderjoe cryptops1: uh... because I forgot to add it to the wiki?
09:03 🔗 Coderjoe other than possibly uploading it to batcave (and perhaps downloading it to home), I can no longer remember what I did with the resulting warc file
09:04 🔗 Coderjoe ah. found it
09:04 🔗 Coderjoe 2.7G lachlan_cranswick/
09:07 🔗 cryptops1 np
09:07 🔗 cryptops1 i was afraid it got thrown out
09:08 🔗 Coderjoe and, iirc, there is a copy on batcave for SketchCow to push into archive.org at some point
09:09 🔗 SketchCow I delete everything
09:09 🔗 SketchCow Need more space for dwarf fortress 2012
09:10 🔗 Coderjoe World of Wanking 2012?
09:10 🔗 Coderjoe with the new Hot Elf Babes expansion pack?
09:13 🔗 ersi <@SketchCow> I delete
09:13 🔗 ersi Haha, like that'd happen!
09:59 🔗 chronomex mmm world of wanking
10:07 🔗 SketchCow I am slamming 6,200 podcasts into archive.org.
10:07 🔗 SketchCow http://www.archive.org/details/mypodcast-2020
10:26 🔗 SketchCow http://www.archive.org/details/mypodcast-zstalkshow
10:26 🔗 SketchCow It's beginning.
10:26 🔗 * SketchCow bows.
10:38 🔗 * BlueMax laughs
10:38 🔗 BlueMax Found this while browsing r/wtf on reddit
10:38 🔗 BlueMax http://i.imgur.com/FW8xz.png
10:41 🔗 SketchCow Here, BlueMax http://www.archive.org/details/mypodcast-dragonballradio
10:42 🔗 BlueMax SketchCow: ?
10:42 🔗 BlueMax What's this supposed to be
10:42 🔗 SketchCow I'm rewarding you
10:43 🔗 * BlueMax scratches his head
10:43 🔗 nitro2k01 Over 9000 rewards
10:47 🔗 SketchCow 26 podcasts already up
10:47 🔗 SketchCow BlueMax: Can you link me to the wtf
10:48 🔗 BlueMax www.reddit.com/r/WTF/comments/pqrya/who_seriously_sits_and_writes_this_stuff/
10:48 🔗 ersi ahaha
10:49 🔗 ersi and that links to this image with "Ariel's Wedding night" on textfiles.com: http://i.imgur.com/FW8xz.png
10:49 🔗 BlueMax what ersi said
10:51 🔗 BlueMax To think that page wouldn't have survived if it wasn't backed up
10:51 🔗 SketchCow I've got 6 different scripts running to push these podcasts in.
10:54 🔗 BlueMax And we should all be greatful
11:42 🔗 godane mirroring blackhat.com
11:45 🔗 kin37ik wait, what the hell? lol
11:48 🔗 godane why is www.geocities.com.7z.302 is listed as WAVE file on archive.org
11:48 🔗 godane http://www.archive.org/details/2009-archiveteam-geocities-part1
11:52 🔗 kin37ik is that the fixed archive?
11:53 🔗 godane i don't know
11:54 🔗 godane i think i need to get a bluray burner
11:54 🔗 kin37ik okay, sure enough i grabbed geocities off the torrent wire, but i had to grab some files again because some archives were damaged, though im not sure which ones
11:55 🔗 kin37ik not sure if it might be the same on archive.org or whether it's been appended
11:59 🔗 Nemo_bis compare the checksums
12:02 🔗 godane i'm just thinking of squashfs
12:02 🔗 godane cause squashfs does hard links if files are the same
12:04 🔗 godane i have full squashfs file of www.defcon.org that can be used host it locally on local lan
12:20 🔗 SketchCow Archive.org isn't hot with some things.
12:20 🔗 SketchCow .302 is a sound extension
12:20 🔗 SketchCow But this isn't a sound file.
12:21 🔗 godane thats what i thought
12:28 🔗 SketchCow http://www.archive.org/details/mypodcast-beatmd
12:28 🔗 SketchCow 14 hours of sound mix!
12:32 🔗 Nemo_bis All those file didn't have any license attached?
12:40 🔗 godane looks like alot of .ppt files are 404 on blackhat.com
12:40 🔗 godane for blackhat 2001
12:59 🔗 godane blackhat.com was not that big
12:59 🔗 godane only 1.2gb
12:59 🔗 godane defcon.org is like 3.8gb
13:16 🔗 godane alot of .pdf didn't get download or are 404 on blackhat.com
13:16 🔗 godane thats not good
13:19 🔗 godane 1485 broken links it looks like
13:24 🔗 emijrp I heard that video talks contain hidden info using steganography.
13:29 🔗 godane i have to redownload it
13:29 🔗 godane stupid wget-warc delete everything i think in then try redownloaded it
13:30 🔗 godane i thought it was only redownloaded files i had
13:31 🔗 godane anyways i added a -o www.blackhat.com.log to the end of my command
14:43 🔗 closure Coderjoe: for hashing git-annex uses sha256sum etc commands. So whatever they do.
14:46 🔗 underscor closure: Whenever you have a few minutes, want to look this over and see if I did anything wrong?
14:46 🔗 underscor https://github.com/ArchiveTeam/ia-digibarn
14:53 🔗 closure underscor: yeah.. you need to push the git-annex branch too
14:53 🔗 underscor 0 2:53PM:abuie@abuie-dev:~/digibarn 23635 Ï git annex status
14:53 🔗 underscor ae80d947-67dd-46e7-88be-1503f57cd03b -- here (DigiBarn (@ IA))
14:53 🔗 underscor semitrusted repositories: 1
14:53 🔗 underscor supported backends: SHA256 SHA1 SHA512 SHA224 SHA384 SHA256E SHA1E SHA512E SHA224E SHA384E WORM URL
14:53 🔗 underscor supported remote types: git bup directory rsync web hook
14:53 🔗 underscor trusted repositories: 0
14:53 🔗 underscor untrusted repositories: 1
14:53 🔗 underscor 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000001 -- web
14:53 🔗 underscor dead repositories: 0
14:53 🔗 underscor local annex keys: 0
14:53 🔗 underscor local annex size: 0 bytes
14:54 🔗 underscor known annex keys: 2190
14:54 🔗 underscor known annex size: 12 gigabytes
14:54 🔗 underscor backend usage:
14:54 🔗 underscor URL: 2190
14:54 🔗 underscor closure: Ok, pushing now
14:54 🔗 closure it should auto-push after the 1st time.. that's where git-annex keeps its info
14:54 🔗 underscor So, after I git push -u origin git-annex once, it should auto-push from then on?
14:55 🔗 closure that's been my experience
14:55 🔗 underscor okay, cool
14:55 🔗 underscor thanks!
14:56 🔗 underscor Oh, wow, lots of objects in that branch
14:56 🔗 underscor haha
15:05 🔗 underscor 70% compressing
15:05 🔗 closure wow, that's more objects than I'd expect
15:05 🔗 closure or an arm box?
15:06 🔗 closure it'll have 2 files in the branch per file in the repo, plus some directories etc..
15:06 🔗 closure oh, you did individual addurls per file.. so it also has 2000 commits I guess
15:43 🔗 closure closure: looks ok
15:43 🔗 closure woah
15:43 🔗 * closure core dumps
15:50 🔗 Archivis2 closure: ~17k objects
15:51 🔗 Archivis2 It's on an overworked nfsmount, so that doesn't help with IO
15:51 🔗 closure yeah, so it's some unavoidable, but some of it can be improved
15:51 🔗 godane how do you spider a website without download?
15:52 🔗 Archivis2 closure: Still pretty damn impressive!
15:52 🔗 Archivis2 :)
15:52 🔗 Archivis2 I'm testing the recursive collection downloader to git-annex script I wrote this morning on http://archive.org/details/vectrex
15:53 🔗 Archivis2 Nothing like being bored in statistics!
15:53 🔗 * Archivis2 chuckles
15:53 🔗 closure well, I'm thinking of adding an option --pathdepth=N , and it would take the last N parts of the path and use that for the filename. Then you could run one single git annex addurl and pass it all the urls in one go. This would be more efficient.
15:54 🔗 Archivis2 That'd be pretty neat
15:54 🔗 Archivis2 Although some of these are >1,000 files, so they probably would need to be batched smaller
15:55 🔗 Archivis2 closure: It works! \o/ http://hastebin.com/siyiyinoki.hs
15:55 🔗 Archivis2 (I purposely did a small collection to start with)
15:55 🔗 closure hmm, command line length limits you mean?
15:55 🔗 closure possibly a problem yes
15:55 🔗 closure xargs it
15:56 🔗 closure I do wonder if one repo per collection is the right granularity. You could put them all in one repo, might be more fun :)
16:01 🔗 Archivis2 All IA items in one repo?
16:01 🔗 Archivis2 I dunno how well it'd handle that
16:02 🔗 closure all archiveteam items in one repo
16:02 🔗 Archivis2 Oh, yes
16:02 🔗 Archivis2 That's how it's going to be
16:02 🔗 closure all IA would probably be insane
16:03 🔗 Archivis2 vectrex and digibarn are collections similar to AT
16:03 🔗 Archivis2 (number-of-items-wise)
16:03 🔗 Archivis2 AT one is running, but it takes much longer because there is a large number of individual files
16:04 🔗 closure ah, I see
16:04 🔗 Archivis2 Especially in the geocities/yahoo video things, where they're split into smaller 7z.nnn
16:04 🔗 closure let me write this feature and you can have much faster runtime
16:04 🔗 Archivis2 \o/
16:06 🔗 Archivis2 https://github.com/ArchiveTeam/ia-vectrex
16:06 🔗 Archivis2 git-annex branch still pushin
16:06 🔗 Archivis2 g
16:14 🔗 tef http://blog.archive.org/2012/02/15/want-to-help-build-a-distributed-web/
16:17 🔗 closure Just depth
16:17 🔗 closure filter (not . null) $ split "/" fullurl
16:17 🔗 closure fromend depth $ map escape $
16:17 🔗 closure | depth > 0 -> filesize $ join "/" $
16:17 🔗 closure oh yeah
16:25 🔗 closure Archivis2: ok, --pathdepth pushed
16:25 🔗 closure I'd be curious to see the comparison importing using it and xargs
16:28 🔗 soultcer Sweet, I wanted to try git-annex for archiveteam today and now I come here and someoen already did all the work ;-)
16:30 🔗 soultcer Are they checksummed?
16:30 🔗 closure not the way he's doing it, it would need to download them all. but can be migrated to checksums later
16:31 🔗 closure git annex migrate --backend=SHA256
16:31 🔗 soultcer The meta.xml files do contain checksums, maybe it is possible without downloading everything?
16:31 🔗 closure oh, hmm, suppose
16:32 🔗 soultcer Oh, not meta.xml, _files.xml
16:32 🔗 soultcer Though it only carries md5 and sha1 sums, so you'd have to use the sha1 backend
16:41 🔗 closure maybe something like git annex migrate --converter=xml-parsing.rb
16:42 🔗 closure will think on it
16:45 🔗 cryptops1 does anyone happen to have freenode's podcasts?
16:45 🔗 cryptops1 the freenode network released some rather obscene podcasts around year 2006-2008?
16:45 🔗 closure lol, really?
16:45 🔗 cryptops1 yea they were pretty sweet!
16:45 🔗 cryptops1 according to their descriptions
16:45 🔗 closure was lilo in them?
16:46 🔗 cryptops1 and they won't upload them for me since i'm life-banned on that network
16:46 🔗 cryptops1 i don't know, i don't think so
16:46 🔗 closure he was an old pal of mine, it would be good to hear his voice
16:46 🔗 cryptops1 if he faked his death, you won't be hearing from him
16:47 🔗 cryptops1 i always like to think people faked their death with a small chance of finding them
16:47 🔗 cryptops1 but i've considered the possibility when my friends have 'died'
16:47 🔗 cryptops1 anyways ... there really ARE freenode podcasts!
16:47 🔗 cryptops1 i think the url is still up
16:48 🔗 cryptops1 podcast.freenode.net
16:48 🔗 cryptops1 i was wrong, they are from year 2009
17:02 🔗 balrog_ph cryptops1: Lol how did you get life banned?
17:06 🔗 cryptops1 don't know, but i'm ban evading right now probably
17:09 🔗 godane i'm getting all the '404' files from blackhat.com
17:10 🔗 godane i did a spider to what i got of a local version of mirror of blackhat.com
17:10 🔗 godane 1496 files were missing
17:12 🔗 godane there are still 404 errors in the list but i'm getting most of it
17:34 🔗 cryptops1 one of the topics for a freenode postcast is 00:22:59 - We beg for money
17:34 🔗 cryptops1 so maybe lilo was still around back then
18:02 🔗 Archivis2 closure: Thanks!
18:02 🔗 Archivis2 How do I use it?
18:03 🔗 SketchCow Hey.
18:06 🔗 Archivis2 Hi SketchCow
18:06 🔗 Archivis2 How goes it?
18:07 🔗 SketchCow Are you new or did you change your name?
18:07 🔗 Archivis2 Oh, sorry
18:07 🔗 underscor Let me go change the default for efnet
18:08 🔗 underscor (I don't usually irc from my laptop, so all my settings aren't on here)
18:11 🔗 closure underscor: you should be able to do something like: geturls | xargs git-annex addurl --fast --pathdepth=2
18:12 🔗 underscor where urls spits out the URL list
18:12 🔗 closure yep
18:13 🔗 underscor So, if I have example.com/dir1/file1.mp3 example.com/dir1/dir2/file2.mp3 and example.com/dir1/dir2/dir3/file3.mp3 will I end up with dir1/file1.mp3, dir1/dir2/file2.mp3 and dir1/dir2/dir3/file3.mp3?
18:17 🔗 closure with pathdepth=2 yes
18:17 🔗 closure um, no
18:18 🔗 closure it currently takes the last 2 parts of the path
18:18 🔗 closure maybe that should be --pathdepth=-2 and --pathdepth=2 should *skip* the first two parts?
18:19 🔗 underscor That would be more useful
18:19 🔗 underscor At least, in my usage scenario
18:20 🔗 underscor Because I just don't want the ia6xxxxx.archive.org/16/items/ bit, but I want everything else
18:20 🔗 underscor (which may be an arbitrary length
18:20 🔗 underscor )
18:26 🔗 swebb2 It turns out that I can't rsync to the badcave server anymore. Is this a temporary thing or has my access been removed?
18:26 🔗 swebb2 s/badcave/batcave/
18:27 🔗 closure underscor: done
18:28 🔗 closure | depth > 0 -> frombits $ drop depth
18:28 🔗 closure | depth < 0 -> frombits $ reverse . take (negate depth) . reverse
18:28 🔗 underscor schweeeeeeet!
18:28 🔗 underscor swebb2: Batcave is offline, we're moving to fos/fortressofsolitude
18:28 🔗 underscor Have to talk to SketchCow for a new module
18:28 🔗 underscor (I dunno if he's doing them yet though)
18:32 🔗 swebb2 ok. Can someone just email me my new creds or something when they're ready?
18:41 🔗 underscor Poke SketchCow
18:41 🔗 underscor He's the gatekeeper :)
18:42 🔗 underscor Or just drop your email in here and we'll get it to him
18:42 🔗 underscor s/email/email address/
18:44 🔗 SketchCow Whaaa
18:45 🔗 SketchCow I just pinged him.
18:46 🔗 SketchCow Basically, I'm having people verify with me which directories are done, so I can start pushing them along.
18:47 🔗 underscor Okay, I see
18:48 🔗 alard SketchCow: Any news about the umich data?
18:48 🔗 SketchCow IT's syncing, but REALLY slowly.
18:49 🔗 SketchCow It's only down to C.
18:49 🔗 alard Oh, that's not fast. I'll be patient then.
18:50 🔗 underscor SketchCow: How much space does fos have?
18:50 🔗 underscor Just curious :D
18:50 🔗 SketchCow I'm not letting you on fos.
18:50 🔗 SketchCow I'm going to find you your own machine.
18:50 🔗 SketchCow Right now, though I'm finding enormous slowdowns on fos and I am worried I am sharing a cancerous baremetal host.
18:51 🔗 underscor Yeah, I was noticing that
18:51 🔗 underscor (looking at the stats in the dom0)
18:52 🔗 underscor SketchCow: Oh, okay. That works too, I suppose :D
18:52 🔗 SketchCow The new machine is aprt of a new breed and I do not know the story.
18:53 🔗 underscor Yeah, it's one of the new ganeti fai machines
18:53 🔗 underscor (andy's been teaching me the infra)
18:54 🔗 underscor What's strange is neither the VM nor the baremetal is spending a significant amount of time on iowait
18:54 🔗 underscor We kept seeing that on the dev vm
18:55 🔗 SketchCow Why aren't you asking andy for a machine?
18:55 🔗 SketchCow That's all I'm going to do.
18:55 🔗 underscor Oh, you're already running as cache=none, too
18:55 🔗 underscor That's something I would have suggested to increase performance
18:56 🔗 SketchCow I could also go "Why are you discussing internal archive.org infrastructure on a public channel on EFnet" but I gave up on that thread.
18:56 🔗 underscor Well, I'm just some outside stranger
18:56 🔗 underscor I figured you had more credance with him than I
18:56 🔗 SketchCow I'm louder than you, yes.
18:56 🔗 underscor Well, you're also an employee, unlike me
18:56 🔗 underscor SketchCow: I haven't said anything that's not already publicly available knowledge
18:57 🔗 SketchCow Tell yourself that.
18:57 🔗 underscor But I'll quiet down about it then
18:57 🔗 underscor Tell myself which?
18:58 🔗 SketchCow Tell yourself that constant, consistent dumping of information on the operation of archive.org's machinery and methodology for its operation and remote manipulation will have no far-reaching consequences.
18:59 🔗 SketchCow Also, have some pie
19:01 🔗 underscor Alright, touche'
19:01 🔗 underscor You're right, nothing good can possibly come from it.
19:02 🔗 SketchCow You're young, and you're happy to be seeing the parts of the engineering that impresses you, but the ease of use that inevitably comes from some of the choices in the system, which date back to when literally 1 or 3 people had total knowledge of the environment and responsibility for it, which do not scale to univerally being known.
19:02 🔗 SketchCow ...are not good to drop.
19:04 🔗 underscor I see. Thanks.
19:04 🔗 SketchCow Also, I confess that the bathhouse wasn't clothing optional
19:05 🔗 SketchCow And there is actually no "rub room"
19:06 🔗 SketchCow I hit a steam room in Helsinki, those guys know how to run a steam room
19:08 🔗 closure indeed. crazy find and their birch branch flagellation
19:08 🔗 underscor haha
19:08 🔗 closure finns even
19:08 🔗 SketchCow Our finn host told us to do that
19:08 🔗 SketchCow We go to the sauna, and the guy who runs it looks at us, and goes "... first time?"
19:08 🔗 closure our finn host told us not to drink alcohol in the really hot room, or we could die.
19:08 🔗 SketchCow "you don't need to do that."
19:09 🔗 SketchCow Also, the snow thing was awesome
19:09 🔗 SketchCow The guy who runs it has the demeanor of hourly motel clerk
19:09 🔗 cryptops1 was there glory holes?
19:09 🔗 closure oh, you went to the helsinki ice bar?
19:09 🔗 SketchCow And when we were there, my lady has the steam room to herself
19:10 🔗 SketchCow The ladies steam room
19:10 🔗 SketchCow and he said it was fine for me to go up there
19:10 🔗 SketchCow so we had a steam room to ourselves for a while
19:10 🔗 closure tmi
19:10 🔗 SketchCow No, not the ice bar
19:10 🔗 SketchCow I mean the hanging out outside and rubbing snow on yourself thing
19:11 🔗 closure yeah, in summer you just have to jump in the lake and swim as deep as possible, not as nice
19:12 🔗 SketchCow http://www.flickr.com/photos/mirka23/6849416475/in/photosof-textfiles/
19:17 🔗 SketchCow I was told this was the best sauna, but I bet it was the most authentic
19:17 🔗 SketchCow Wood-fired steam, etc.
19:19 🔗 closure looks suspiciously like a train
19:19 🔗 closure oh, slideshow
20:33 🔗 closure underscor: how's it going?
20:36 🔗 closure I have a new command pushed for you (or soultcer)
20:37 🔗 closure git annex rekey --force file1 SHA1-sNNN--XXX file2 SHA1-sNNN-XXX ...
20:37 🔗 chronomex sweet
20:37 🔗 closure the NNN must be size in bytes, the NNN is the sha1 of course
20:38 🔗 closure I'd recommend adding all the urls in one command, and then immedaitly rekeying them in one more command. That will be most efficient.
20:40 🔗 soultcer One repository for all Archiveteam projects sounds pretty awesome
20:43 🔗 closure er, the XXX is the sha1 , NNN is size
20:44 🔗 Nemo_bis underscor, I don't understand, does having only your current machine actually prevent from doing something on the poor IA servers? :)
20:44 🔗 Nemo_bis aka where are you uploading all this data to :p http://abuie-dev.us.archive.org:8088/mrtg/networkv2.html
20:44 🔗 closure git annex rekey --force filea SHA1-s$asize--$asha fileb SHA1-s$bsize--$bsha ...
20:47 🔗 Nemo_bis so long http://www.archive.org/details/mypodcast-dbandit

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