00:00:00 --- log: started forth/19.09.14 01:01:07 --- quit: rdrop-exit (Quit: Lost terminal) 03:30:01 --- join: dddddd (~dddddd@unaffiliated/dddddd) joined #forth 06:58:31 --- join: DKordic (~user@178-222-28-243.dynamic.isp.telekom.rs) joined #forth 07:46:09 --- join: dys (~dys@tmo-119-109.customers.d1-online.com) joined #forth 08:07:07 --- quit: dave0 (Quit: dave's not here) 08:38:29 --- quit: ryke (Ping timeout: 268 seconds) 09:25:32 --- join: xek (~xek@user-94-254-232-167.play-internet.pl) joined #forth 09:34:12 --- quit: xek (Ping timeout: 265 seconds) 09:36:27 --- quit: gravicappa (Ping timeout: 268 seconds) 09:45:57 --- join: ryke (~Thunderbi@71-9-171-192.dhcp.jcsn.tn.charter.com) joined #forth 10:05:55 --- join: xek (~xek@user-94-254-232-167.play-internet.pl) joined #forth 10:14:17 --- join: xek_ (~xek@public-gprs400725.centertel.pl) joined #forth 10:17:20 --- quit: xek (Ping timeout: 245 seconds) 10:36:04 --- quit: ryke (Ping timeout: 265 seconds) 10:53:58 --- join: gravicappa (~gravicapp@h109-187-49-131.dyn.bashtel.ru) joined #forth 11:06:52 --- quit: creat48 (Remote host closed the connection) 12:11:17 --- quit: gravicappa (Ping timeout: 265 seconds) 12:19:32 --- join: ryke (~Thunderbi@71-9-171-192.dhcp.jcsn.tn.charter.com) joined #forth 12:28:12 --- quit: ryke (Ping timeout: 265 seconds) 12:29:28 --- join: MrMobius (~default@c-73-134-82-217.hsd1.va.comcast.net) joined #forth 13:05:12 --- quit: `presiden (Read error: Connection reset by peer) 13:05:18 --- join: `preside1 (~presiden@unaffiliated/matematikaadit) joined #forth 14:45:03 --- nick: `preside1 -> `presiden 16:11:07 --- quit: dys (Ping timeout: 268 seconds) 16:17:38 --- join: rdrop-exit (~markwilli@112.201.170.86) joined #forth 16:45:24 --- quit: xek_ (Read error: Connection reset by peer) 17:00:44 --- join: dave0 (~davezero@069.d.003.ncl.iprimus.net.au) joined #forth 18:19:21 --- quit: Keshl (Read error: Connection reset by peer) 18:20:00 --- join: Keshl (~Purple@207.44.70.214.res-cmts.gld.ptd.net) joined #forth 18:21:27 --- join: ryke (~Thunderbi@71-9-171-192.dhcp.jcsn.tn.charter.com) joined #forth 19:22:16 Good morning Keepers of the Forth 19:22:58 good afternoon Zen Forth Master 19:23:18 Hi tp! 19:24:04 Spending a lazy Sunday morning perusing Ting's Footsteps in an Empty Valley 19:24:55 I added your tutorial to my Sourceforge doc site yesterday :) https://mecrisp-stellaris-folkdoc.sourceforge.io/glossary.html#postpone 19:25:15 I love Tings 'eforth and zen' I have been rereading it also 19:26:55 While walking the dogs yesterday I was pondering how much better I could have explained it 19:27:22 I think if the student understand it, the question is moot ? 19:27:57 I guess so 19:28:09 I tried to explain 'bitfields' to a new Mecrisp-Stellaris user the other day and he didnt get it, I failed totally 19:29:28 one of my problems is that the use of bitfields are so obvious to me I couldnt think of alternative ways to explain them 19:30:11 'registers are made of bits, and those bits are called bitfields' 19:30:23 how hard can that be to understand ? 19:31:48 right 19:33:01 hey check this out, it was my first ever embedded experience in 1976 and I built the prototype machine for the company in the patent and went to Port Hedland in Western Australia and installed it for field tests at a massive iron ore facility 19:33:07 https://patents.google.com/patent/US4205230 19:33:55 Very cool :) 19:34:21 i was a senior electronics tech assisting the design engineer at the time 19:35:33 the embedded development system was a Teletype with high speed paper tape and a National Pace 16 bit micro system 19:36:48 --- quit: ryke (Ping timeout: 240 seconds) 19:38:01 I'm perusing the Wikipedia page on the PACE 19:38:29 I had believed that the engineer wrote a Forth for it and actually emailed him the other day (after not communicating with him for the last 46 years!) and asked him, his reply was "Close, but no cigar... I wrote a floating point arithmetic package for the PACE processor. I made it stack oriented to emulate the HP65 programmable calculator I had, so I could test algorithms on the the HP65 then map them easily to the PACE" 19:39:57 HP65 cool, I still two HP calculators 19:40:02 The PACE was nothing compared to even a 6800, but the CPU did cost $270 AUD in 1976 19:40:49 I never had any HP calcs, I couldnt afford them. But I had 100% lust for them 19:41:25 The HP calculator designers were into Forth 19:41:34 makes sense 19:42:21 I have an HP-16C Computer Scientist (pretty rare now) and a HP48GX 19:42:45 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HP-16C 19:43:28 You could set the word size on it, very useful 19:44:55 --- join: ryke (~Thunderbi@71-9-171-192.dhcp.jcsn.tn.charter.com) joined #forth 19:45:32 The language on the HP48 was Forth-inspired RPL 19:45:52 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RPL_(programming_language) 19:49:12 IIRC some of the HP calculator engineers were SVFIG members 19:56:13 do you know the "https://www.swissmicros.com/" calculators ? 19:57:40 oops wrong calculator 19:57:55 ah yes, they have a clone of the 16C but smaller 19:57:57 --- join: [1]MrMobius (~default@c-73-134-82-217.hsd1.va.comcast.net) joined #forth 19:58:17 how about the https://www.numworks.com/ calculator ? 19:58:30 Mecrisp-Stellaris actually has a full Forth image for it 19:59:10 I hadn't heard of the numworks one 19:59:24 everything about the numworks calculator is open including hardware, case, software 19:59:46 cool, then you may enjoy reading about it 19:59:48 <[1]MrMobius> didnt they switch to just sticking a raspberry pi zero in there for the numworks thing? 19:59:54 hahah, no 20:00:24 216 MHz ARMv7 processor 20:00:26 <[1]MrMobius> I remember some disappointment surrounding that unless im thinking about another project 20:00:31 <[1]MrMobius> ok good 20:00:58 battery: 20 hours in use, several years in standby 20:01:05 --- quit: MrMobius (Ping timeout: 265 seconds) 20:01:05 --- nick: [1]MrMobius -> MrMobius 20:01:06 just about all my hobby stuff is building calculators and it drives me nuts every time someone says I should just stop and stick a raspberry pi in there 20:01:21 or just download a smartphone app 0_0 20:01:33 MrMobius, awesome 20:01:36 that is pretty good 20:01:52 MrMobius, what do you think of the numworks calculator ? 20:02:24 Amazing, many of the old HP calcs had a 4-bit CPU, the HP Saturn 20:02:29 yeah, calculators love internal electronics that needs 3A to run it ? 20:02:56 rdrop-exit, sure, and a lot of the cheap and nasty calculators had 1 bit cpus 20:04:14 MrMobius, there was some dissapointment at some point only because some really complex functions weren't available as they are on high end HP's etc, iirc 20:04:30 The physical feel of the old HPs is second to none 20:04:47 but of course as it's fully open, they (and more) can be added I think 20:05:14 rdrop-exit, actually its a 64 bit CPU but has features to separate out each of the 16 nibbles individually afaiu 20:05:29 rdrop-exit, oh yeah, the feel of a early HP button was exquisite, I think thats what made the legend 20:05:42 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HP_Saturn 20:06:37 rdrop-exit, youre right. i didnt know it does each 4 bit step in series 20:07:31 It's funky :) 20:09:02 to, havent really looked at numworks too much. neat to see someone is working on it 20:09:22 do you guys know that the Galileo spacecraft (1989) used the Saturn microprocessor in it's navigational and control system, because it didn't, I just totally made that up :) 20:09:49 irection pad is on the wrong size and they need more labels on the keys :P 20:10:02 *direction 20:10:45 I like cramming text onto every last surface possible like the HP48 but I guess not everyone does 20:10:54 one of my first hobby micro development systems used a 1 bit cpu, the Motorola MC14500B 20:11:39 thats awesome! I bought about 10 of those really cheap a few years ago and had one of them running. I wanted to put 8 together and make a primitive 8 bit CPU 20:11:56 couldnt figure out how to do 8 bit math without breaking it up into 1 bit steps though 20:12:11 MrMobius, Im guessing the simple and open design of the Numworks calculator probably prohibited a HP style of text everywhere ? 20:12:58 thats awesome! I built a membrane keypad and made a small enclosure with leds etc for mine 20:13:17 ya just their clean design choice I guess. probably a lot of people like that 20:13:31 so basically just a 1 bit system from the start? 20:13:40 but my design was terrible, the keyboard sucked even if it had letraset legends on each key for the instructions of the cpu 20:14:01 hehe 20:14:06 I never even wrote anything apart from 1+1 on it iirc 20:14:15 I dont want to debounce a keypad in software with a 1 bit CPU :P 20:14:35 Letraset, wow, haven't seen Letraset sheets in decades. 20:14:41 I used a RC network and a membrane keypad doesnt really bounce much 20:15:03 * MrMobius googles "Letraset" 20:15:31 I used to make my first pcbs using rolls of thin black tape, then the next improvement was letraset PCB rub on component footprints 20:16:08 neato 20:16:28 im always amazed to see hand drawn traces in old hardware 20:16:29 I used to always have a drawer-full of Lettraset sheets 20:16:39 "So much shitty old tech is now lost, for none that remember it still live" 20:16:53 lol 20:16:56 ;-) 20:17:19 btw, speaking of calculators, anyone going to the HP handheld conference next week? 20:17:27 MrMobius, yep, rdrop-exit and I lived thru interesting times! 20:17:41 hehe 20:17:55 not unless it's in Northern New South Wales in Australia ;-) 20:18:12 MrMobius, would love too, but can't justify the trip 20:18:14 its not but you should ask where it will be next year :P 20:18:44 rdrop-exit, who *didn't* have a draw full of letraset products ? 20:19:13 I used letraset for equipment front panel labels 20:19:21 I used to have a handheld Basic programmable Sharp computer, pretty cool for the time 20:19:41 I used letraset for automotive bezels such as speedos, tachos 20:20:18 I used to have a sharp calculator with BLUE cold cathode display, those things were just *awesome* 20:20:24 battery powered 20:21:29 Found it 20:21:30 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharp_PC-1211 20:21:32 owning a blue cold cathode display calculator was just like being hand fed Pina Colatas by bikini clad beauties on a beach in the Bahamas, *exactly* as awesome 20:21:47 :)) 20:22:14 CPU SC43177/SC43178 processors at 256 kHz ! 20:22:58 rdrop-exit, that Sharp_PC-1211 was *expensive* iirc 20:23:52 I have no memory of how much I paid for it, but I remember drooling over it repeatedly before finally buying it 20:24:21 oh yeah, me too! I mean who didnt want a "trs80 calculator" ? 20:24:33 IIRC there was a version that came in a briefcase with an acoustic coupler modem, real James Bond stuff 20:24:36 I remember drooling over high end *slide rules* ... 20:24:43 MrMobius: I don't collect them, but I have 3 12Cs and a SwissMicros in the mail. 20:24:44 yeah I remember it 20:24:59 tp, I still drool over slide rules 20:25:14 dbucklin, in the mail ? recent purchases ? 20:25:25 tp: yes, exactly. 20:25:43 rdrop-exit, slide rules were so incredibly engineered, a pleasure to slide around! 20:25:58 dbucklin, awesome, do you know that Mecrisp-Stellaris Forth has a image for it ? 20:26:13 tp: that blows my mind! 20:26:17 it doesnt use the low power modes as yet iirc 20:26:29 so it may only last a day without a psu 20:26:52 or you can implement low power on it, I can help :) 20:27:03 ha, interesting! I've been looking at mecrisp-stellaris for a while. 20:27:03 tp, my dream calculator is a Curta, never owned one 20:27:34 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fhUfRIeRSZE 20:27:34 dbucklin, cool, I'm quite familiar with Mecrisp-Stellaris on Cortex-M 20:28:26 tp: oh, I've seen your videos ;) 20:29:18 dbucklin, theyre pretty low tech, I used a cheap webcam and a cellphone for audio 20:29:20 rdrop-exit: I never knew that existed, or that I needed one. 20:29:52 The Curtas are so cool, ingenious 20:29:53 tp: I've seen a couple YT vids and yours are not terrible at all. 20:30:07 rdrop-exit, luckily I'm not overcome with 'gear acquisition lust' with the Curta 20:30:18 :) 20:30:40 dbucklin, I hope to produce better ones soon after I retire in 12 months and have more time 20:30:51 dbucklin, thanks :) 20:31:33 Sharp 1211 is really cool 20:31:36 I'd love a Swissmicro tho, just because it's so open 20:31:41 I had a PB-2000C at one point 20:32:14 which is the only interpretted C ive ever used afaik :P 20:33:07 Check this out: http://www.pc-1500.info/2015/04/04/ce-154-the-sharp-briefcase-for-the-pc-1500/ 20:33:58 I remember at the time seeing one with an acoustic coupler modem, can't find it 20:34:11 0_0 20:37:28 I still have a Psion somewhere, the guy who designed it has a new version out 20:37:45 Psion's had great keyboards 20:37:46 I used to maintain trs80 laptops and acoustic coupler modems for AAP-Reuters once 20:38:52 Those Radio Shack laptops were all the rage with reporters 20:39:05 I had a palm pilot, the industrial version with laser barcode scanner, but pulled it apart recently, it had a 'dragonball' cpu inside 20:39:40 they sure were, and when they didnt backup and the bloody things locked up, it wasnt a pretty sight 20:40:10 one reporter comes to me with hers, shes spent all morning writing a story and it's completely frozen ... 20:40:44 I explain as tactfully as I can that the work is lost, it's frozen and only a reboot will bring it back to life 20:41:10 she just stares at me, I see her eyes getting redder and redder, tears begin to brim 20:41:36 without a word she spins on her heel, and walks stiffly to her office and slams the door 20:41:53 poor girl 20:42:05 then I hear screaming and cussing, and stuff breaking as it's hurled against the walls 20:42:48 she was a early feminist type, pretty unstable 20:43:11 this was about 1985 20:43:11 Had to look it up, the new Psion is called Gemini PDA, it dual-boots Android and Linux 20:44:16 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cTU28QgYHdQ&t=403s 20:44:39 that things a android! 20:44:42 CPU/GPU system-on-chip is a MediaTek Deca Core Helio, either the X25 or X27 chipset. 20:44:42 2x Cortex A72 @2.6GHz 20:44:42 4x Cortex A53 @2.0GHz 20:44:42 4x Cortex A53 @1.6GHz 20:44:42 ARM Mali T880 MP4 @875MHz 20:44:43 RAM: 4GB 20:44:47 Flash: 64GB 20:45:37 Here's another look at it: 20:45:38 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8eL-kFeJ6M8&t=644s 20:45:59 Same keyboard as the Psion 5 20:46:05 I took a Palm IIIx with me whan I rode a motorbike around australia in 2002, and I didnt charge it once while I was on the road! 20:46:18 and I was on that trip for 3 weeks! 20:47:22 the Palm had a single 'dragonball' cpu 20:47:25 Motorola/Freescale Semiconductor's DragonBall, or MC68328, is a microcontroller design based on the famous 68000 core, but implemented as an all-in-one low-power system for handheld computer use. 20:48:10 I still have the cpu and I wonder from time to time if I'll put it into something with Forth just for fun 20:48:33 It was designed by Motorola in Hong Kong and released in 1995. 20:49:35 I have a Philips phone can supposedly last 143 days on a battery, it's not a smartphone :) 20:50:16 it's a dumbphone :) 20:50:29 I usually charge it once a month, although it still has plenty of charge left 20:50:45 they were all dumbphones once 20:51:31 It has a socket for using it as a charger for other phones 20:52:15 remember when Huawei brought out a really low end android for $60 ? 20:52:22 My wife is always borrowing it to recharge her smartphone 20:52:55 all the phone mfrs laughed and said no one would buy it, but Huawei sold 1 million of them in Africa in 12 months 20:53:46 lots of the worlds population doesnt want a high end smartphone, cant afford one and dont have the power to recharge it daily 20:54:30 There are tons of cheap android smartphones and tablets here 20:55:04 Here's my dumbphone, BTW 20:55:06 https://www.philips.com.ph/c-p/CTE181BK_71/xenium-mobile-phone#see-all-benefits 20:55:20 but that Huawei phone took off because being low end it was ok battery life wise and they could use it as a torch, for selling their food, looking up medical info after being bitten by a Cobra etc 20:56:16 --- quit: dave0 (Quit: dave's not here) 20:57:06 I had a begger ask me for money, I pointed out to him that he had a nicer phone than I 20:57:21 hahahahah 20:58:15 we are moving towards a cashless society in Australia, so beggers will need a sign with a QA code soon 20:58:25 ha 20:59:12 "mate, can you spare 20 cents for a busfare home please ? just scan the QA code please" 21:00:15 I still use a Nokia N9 phone, long after nokia was raped and destroyed by microsoft. 21:00:30 it's real Linux and QT inside 21:00:51 lasts for about 4 days between charging 21:01:15 and *free* on phone satellite maps and navigation! 21:01:25 In California I had a huge Motorola bag phone, the kind you plgged into the cigarette lighter. 21:01:39 Nokia sold their high end phones with the guarantee that maps would always be available 21:02:12 we called them a 'Brick', my dad had one, it cost him about $4000 iirc 21:02:26 it was always locked, only he could use it 21:02:27 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_Bag_Phone 21:03:42 I used it for work, the mobile phone bills were outrageous back then, by the minute (or less) 21:04:44 It came in handy though when my wife was expecting. 21:04:55 thats sure a 'bag' phone! 21:05:25 Heavy too 21:05:31 what was your wife expecting? a phone call? 21:05:38 a baby 21:05:58 yeah, dads had a sealed lead acid 'gell cell' in a bag below the phone cradle 21:07:42 how tech has changed, from bricks to credit card sized phones! 21:07:59 even phone watched with gps 21:08:00 I criss-crossed the San Francisco Bay Area a lot in those days, the office supplied it so that I could be reached by clients at all times 21:08:03 watches 21:08:22 rdrop-exit, tech boom days ? 21:08:54 I guess, late 80s early 90s 21:09:17 rdrop-exit, is it true you're really Steve Wozniak ? 21:09:18 Mainly late 80s 21:10:20 ;) 21:10:57 heheh 21:12:39 dbucklin, I always wondered who was watching my Forth videos ... so you're the one! 21:12:46 haha 21:12:50 ;-) 21:13:29 I think I subscribed to your channel 21:13:43 I had a visitor here who has been learning Forth for about the last 2 months 21:13:50 Can you provide a link so I can make sure 21:13:51 rdrop-exit, wow, amazing! 21:15:12 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kDi-Nlz3-QA 21:15:15 thats my first 21:16:12 anyway, hes a windows user and is using 'terraterm' at 115200 baud with 200mS wnd of line delays to talk to a 'blue pill' running Mecrisp-Stellaris 21:16:23 wnd = end 21:16:27 Yes, I am subscribed 21:17:16 I quickly showed him my system uploading at 460800 baud with color error highlighting etc and was met with a glazed expression 21:18:02 wow, some people are desperate for any Forth material! 21:18:31 haha 21:18:38 I havent enabled adverts etc, I only used it as a vehicle to get some Forth info out 21:19:02 which is just as well because I'll have a million subs in about ... 3097 at this rate 21:21:04 Sometimes I forget how forgotten Forth is 21:21:34 If I wanted to make money with Forth on youtube it would be easy tho, Id just hire a model and advertise shes wearing a bikini made from tissue paper and will jump into a swimming pool from 5 metres while holding a blue pill running Forth ... I'd get 200,000 views overnight 21:21:51 maybe 2 million views 21:22:02 Make a Forth controlled bikini 21:22:44 youtube has it's value tho 21:22:48 sure, 2M views, but you're only earning fractions of a cent per 21:23:07 sure, thats stuff never interested me, I'm a electronics tech 21:23:35 One of my daughters has a youtube channel, but she very rarely posts videos 21:23:41 in the main utube is a gigantic nothing burger 21:24:05 so does one of my sons whose into AI in gaming 21:24:19 he gets about 10 views or so 21:25:06 Ive learnt a lot watching some videos, but for most of what I do I get zero hits on Google 21:25:32 I just checked, she's got 22.9k subscribers 21:25:34 rdrop-exit, forthg 'forgotten' ? was it ever 'massive' ? 21:25:56 wow, is she telling dad what she gets up to for that many subs ? 21:26:06 ;-) 21:26:30 I've never checked my subs, it's not many, but ... Forth and old guy ... 21:27:02 Forth was almost mainstream for a very very short time 21:27:04 i thought if 10 bored forthers found something interesting my efforts were worth it 21:27:16 really ? I must have missed that time 21:27:40 Here's a video of her singing 21:27:47 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wtVl4FVqeU4 21:28:04 then again I was in Westeren Australia most of the time, Im sure in California Forth would have been utterly different 21:28:44 I guess the high point for Forth was 80-81 21:30:48 rdrop-exit, wow, shes outstanding! 21:30:53 (subscribed) 21:31:03 Thanks :) 21:31:18 I see whay shes got 20K+ subs! 21:31:21 why 21:31:36 I have four kids, boy, girl, boy, girl. She's the eldest of the girls. 21:32:10 nice, I have 6 kids, girl, girl, all boys 21:32:22 ahh 80 - 81 21:32:39 Wow, 6. Kudos! 21:33:26 I was happy with 4, my ex had other plans 21:33:52 shes had a 7th since we divorced and that girl is about 20 now 21:34:07 Geez 21:35:04 but I love em all, and of course each one is very different 21:35:22 Forth lost ground as the computer market became more homogeneous 21:35:31 yeah, makes sense 21:35:45 and once C took over, that was it 21:36:53 yes, also interpreted languages in general lost ground to compiled languages 21:36:59 80 - 81 I was raising a family and working as a instrument tech, mostly learning how to use a lathe and milling machine etc 21:38:43 I think I owned a AIM 6502 development kit and a Cromenco Z80 development system in that time 21:39:31 they were replaced witha Intel SDK8085 and it was replaced by a SWTP 6800 dev system that was my first true love ) 21:39:35 :) 21:40:26 http://www.swtpc.com/mholley/swtpc_6800.htm 21:40:52 Southwest Technical Products Corporation of San Antonio, Texas 21:41:10 bbl, gotta hit the supermarket before it closes 21:41:22 I learned C at a UC Berkeley extension course held at Xerox PARC 21:41:30 --- quit: ryke (Ping timeout: 245 seconds) 21:41:50 Ciao tp, catch you later 21:49:07 --- quit: guan (*.net *.split) 21:49:07 --- quit: jhei (*.net *.split) 21:49:07 --- quit: irsol (*.net *.split) 21:49:07 --- quit: phadthai (*.net *.split) 21:49:07 --- quit: tangentstorm (*.net *.split) 21:49:07 --- quit: pointfree (*.net *.split) 21:49:15 --- join: phadthai (mmondor@ginseng.pulsar-zone.net) joined #forth 21:49:34 --- join: guan (sid222713@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-nxxwggoeemdgqgqc) joined #forth 21:49:38 --- join: jhei (sid81469@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-lasitluwwkarwsqu) joined #forth 21:52:25 --- join: gravicappa (~gravicapp@h109-187-49-131.dyn.bashtel.ru) joined #forth 21:54:41 --- join: irsol (~irsol@unaffiliated/contempt) joined #forth 21:54:42 --- join: tangentstorm (michal@learnprogramming/etc/tangentstorm) joined #forth 21:54:42 --- join: pointfree (sid204397@gateway/web/irccloud.com/x-psjnrtwopcehutpy) joined #forth 21:57:05 --- quit: gravicappa (Ping timeout: 265 seconds) 22:02:58 --- join: ryke (~Thunderbi@71-9-171-192.dhcp.jcsn.tn.charter.com) joined #forth 22:16:05 --- quit: jedb (Ping timeout: 246 seconds) 22:17:07 --- join: jedb (~jedb@185.128.24.51) joined #forth 22:44:58 --- quit: Keshl (Read error: Connection reset by peer) 22:45:12 --- join: Keshl (~Purple@207.44.70.214.res-cmts.gld.ptd.net) joined #forth 22:57:48 --- quit: dddddd (Remote host closed the connection) 23:00:37 --- join: dys (~dys@tmo-107-3.customers.d1-online.com) joined #forth 23:59:59 --- log: ended forth/19.09.14