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@qqmrichter wowee, so passive aggressive! Care to share a blog post about cleaning heterogenous data with awk? Manual page would work.

The #PapersInSystems (remote) discussion series is a great opportunity to engage in focused conversation and share insights as we explore a paper of interest, and make connections (among ourselves, and to our and other work).

Next: "Improving Our Ability to Improve: A Call for Investment in a New Future" by Douglas C. Engelbart

Discussion will be led by @art3starr

When: Wed., September 13th, 1-2pm Eastern Time

Info/sign up (free):
ti.to/bredemeyer/engelbartabil

Paper: worrydream.com/refs/Engelbart%

@BPStuart wait, can you run for president as a convicted conspirator to overthrow the government?

looking for clients, Rust consulting, boosts appreciated 

covid, research 

Literally all the roads lead to Santa Fe.
Adams, Zelazny, G. West, all the systems theorists I adore. Unreal.

@hexedpress I'm mapping my group's way to , them traveling southeast past Brandonsford was their first two sessions.

Progress can be tracked here:

github.com/cognivore/hex-mappi

@qqmrichter you have a repl basically, and you don't use VimL (or lua), you record **macros**. Then you apply given macro to a given situation or combine them. I don't know if you have worked with human-generated data sets or data sets that are scraped using heuristics, and sadly I can't challenge you with data sets I regularly work with VIM macros with because they're secret. But I don't understand why can't you see that if a data set is made using heuristics, it can only be normalised heuristically, not algorithmically.

@qqmrichter I think we have different definitions of big data sets. I'm thinking hundreds of thousands of entries, not millions or more.

#programming What is your preferred way of following log files:

@qqmrichter it's a wrong statement. There are plenty of datasets where an operator writing macros on the fly and determining which one to apply for which section of dirty data.

Once you go NixOS, you cannot go back.

Every other way of maintaining a computer looks like something from the age of dinosaurs. Yesterday, a server of mine wouldn't boot, primarily because of my own mistakes. So I decided on a whim it should be good to finally convert it to NixOS and get it into the fold. That took less than one-hour, and it's now happily churning along.

I'm sure there's going to small problems which needs fixing down the road, but the general ability to just solve a lot of your configuration by writing a (declarative) program simplifies so much stuff.

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