Nothing beats Lisp, except perhaps Paul Graham.
> I believe this is a serious issue. I disagree with that, but respect for standing for what you believe in.
You're so right.
Open an English dictionary (the Oxford one if you're serious), and come back. Note my fault if tbl didn't know how to speak English corectly backed then.
> Well it's not a backdoor. You have no idea. Your pants.
Rtm was not born 22 years ago!
Thanks for the summary with your level of competence (already a good one ;)).
Ja, I don't like when some people refer to other people saying he "smells", that's gross. And in this case, it's also plainly false: Russians don't smell more than, say, redheads.
You are using multi-cores, it doesn't count (and please stop showing off with your mythical LISP, it doesn't even have hygiene, au contraire Haskell & Javascript).
Pedophilia is illegal in most countries, I'd be happy if ad networks gather data about your interest on young boys and pass it to the feds! Beasts! Edit: judging by the downvotes, I guess a good bunch of hackers like to…
*referrer
> Edit: why downvoting? Please stop, you do understand.
You can't ask a chalkboard to be coherent.
filo@yahoo.com
Yeah, and, seriously, a Russian?! Please...
That's 0.05 second for a single request: actually pretty good.
They did, in 2001.
Thanks for this. Is a tweet considered a "referrer"?
You know, if it weren't really impratical, numbers in Arc would be represented by Church numerals, "hash tables" would be alists, strings would be lists, etc. That's a credo :-)
Errors/exceptions, for one, are implemented using continuations.
You clearly don't understand the problem. Even mod_pagespeed or memcached would be more appropriate here: They are rate-limited by the LISP kernel anyway (we are talking about dynamic content here).
Ooops, yes, you are right, sorry. Then I guess it's a pretty decent rate for a Core2 duo.
Well, HN is written in Arc, which is a layer on top of MzScheme. MzScheme handling of sockets is actually already done with the select() syscall, and its "threads" are lightweight non-blocking threads (think Erlang). So…
1: https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Robert_Tappan... 2: same acronym as RTFM, but polite.
This could be resolved using consistent hashing or a critbit tree.
Nothing beats Lisp, except perhaps Paul Graham.
> I believe this is a serious issue. I disagree with that, but respect for standing for what you believe in.
You're so right.
Open an English dictionary (the Oxford one if you're serious), and come back. Note my fault if tbl didn't know how to speak English corectly backed then.
> Well it's not a backdoor. You have no idea. Your pants.
Rtm was not born 22 years ago!
Thanks for the summary with your level of competence (already a good one ;)).
Ja, I don't like when some people refer to other people saying he "smells", that's gross. And in this case, it's also plainly false: Russians don't smell more than, say, redheads.
You are using multi-cores, it doesn't count (and please stop showing off with your mythical LISP, it doesn't even have hygiene, au contraire Haskell & Javascript).
Pedophilia is illegal in most countries, I'd be happy if ad networks gather data about your interest on young boys and pass it to the feds! Beasts! Edit: judging by the downvotes, I guess a good bunch of hackers like to…
*referrer
> Edit: why downvoting? Please stop, you do understand.
You can't ask a chalkboard to be coherent.
filo@yahoo.com
Yeah, and, seriously, a Russian?! Please...
That's 0.05 second for a single request: actually pretty good.
They did, in 2001.
Thanks for this. Is a tweet considered a "referrer"?
You know, if it weren't really impratical, numbers in Arc would be represented by Church numerals, "hash tables" would be alists, strings would be lists, etc. That's a credo :-)
Errors/exceptions, for one, are implemented using continuations.
You clearly don't understand the problem. Even mod_pagespeed or memcached would be more appropriate here: They are rate-limited by the LISP kernel anyway (we are talking about dynamic content here).
Ooops, yes, you are right, sorry. Then I guess it's a pretty decent rate for a Core2 duo.
Well, HN is written in Arc, which is a layer on top of MzScheme. MzScheme handling of sockets is actually already done with the select() syscall, and its "threads" are lightweight non-blocking threads (think Erlang). So…
1: https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/Robert_Tappan... 2: same acronym as RTFM, but polite.
This could be resolved using consistent hashing or a critbit tree.