- Joined
- Jul 17, 2015
All right, weens. Did you get any info or did you just fuck around?
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All right, weens. Did you get any info or did you just fuck around?
I'll bet 400 internet points they just dicked around. And not even in a funny way either.
Referencing AIX and HP-UX is a Murray tell. He got his start on old Data General minis. There aren't too many mini-computers left in the world, but Hewlett-Packard HP-9000 series running HP-UX and IBM RS/6000 systems running AIX are among those few remaining.Of course she's in Mensa.
This is why companies are willing to put up with her:
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So is Lissa saying that she can write one code that rules them all that can run on all those platforms or is she saying she knows how to code for each platform? Because the former is impossible bullshit and the latter is common for programmers who have been writing software for a decade or so. There's like five people at my husband's place of work who can write software for multiple platforms.Of course she's in Mensa.
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This is why companies are willing to put up with her:
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If the address is correct, this would be his house:
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Referencing AIX and HP-UX is a Murray tell. He got his start on old Data General minis. There aren't too many mini-computers left in the world, but Hewlett-Packard HP-9000 series running HP-UX and IBM RS/6000 systems running AIX are among those few remaining.
These are the sorts of systems an old timer like Murray would be familiar working with. Once upon a time, there were a lot of those systems out there and programmers who don't need piss-proof cubes to work on them are readily available.
So is Lissa saying that she can write one code that rules them all that can run on all those platforms or is she saying she knows how to code for each platform? Because the former is impossible bullshit and the latter is common for programmers who have been writing software for a decade or so. There's like five people at my husband's place of work who can write software for multiple platforms.
Backup software, for one.And what piece of software would need to be compliant across all those platforms? I guess Murray isn't implying that Lissa is coding software that has to be compliant on all of them at once. Compliance for, say, Windows and AIX would be weird -- I can't think of anything that would have such requirements, short of deep government stuff, and there's no way a violent piss goblin can get contractor clearance at Oak Ridge or similar. Where exactly does Lissa claim she works?
But yeah, I live in a USA tech hub where software programmers routinely know how to code for various platforms and you don't have to worry about them peeing themselves or killing middle managers. They may stim a bit under extreme stress - autism isn't uncommon - but they still wear shoes and can understand and respond to spoken English. Murray's Faerie Sue is not a software snowflake. That is not a skill set so rare that companies would tolerate someone like Lissa.
Because she has to operate a multimillion dollar space laser or something was her explanation.This biggest question is why the fuck does she have to be there in person, soiling the rugs, for any of this.
She can just do it at home. And skype them. Hell, it'd probably be easier, because she can only communicate through text anyway.
Oh man, I think I'm too young to see all the possible reasons to cross compile to bytecode. Which Lissa should be, as well. But you're right - improbable would have been a better word. HP-UX is still being supported - someone's gotta be dealing with it somewhere. And huge industries, like banking or automotive manufacturing, are still probably wrestling with code that was programmed before I was born. So yeah, unlikely or improbable would have been a better way to phrase it.Uhh, not exactly impossible bullshit. Lots of languages can be run cross-platform by compiling them to bytecode.
Backup software, for one.
I don't disagree with your conclusion, just how you got to it. So far, everything technical that Lissa has said checks out. Yeah, it's kind of suspicious that she's referencing things an old programmer would also reference, but I don't think it provides conclusive proof one way or the other.
Ummm ew I think I know how Lissa/Murray/WTFever ropes real life autistic people in.
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Oh man, I think I'm too young to see all the possible reasons to cross compile to bytecode. Which Lissa should be, as well. But you're right - improbable would have been a better word. HP-UX is still being supported - someone's gotta be dealing with it somewhere. And huge industries, like banking or automotive manufacturing, are still probably wrestling with code that was programmed before I was born. So yeah, unlikely or improbable would have been a better way to phrase it.
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"Lissa" listens to Murray-era music. Again. Even though she "can't" because autism.