Have you recently read a /prog/ post that was bigoted, creepy, misogynistic, transphobic, racist, homophobic, or just reeking of unexamined, toxic privilege? Of course you have! Post it here.
>>43
What does the police have to do with your ``queer'' faggotry, shabbos goy? Will the police make me check my privilege? I already did, my penis is there and yours isn't. Want me to whip you with my big black privilege?
>>45
One day my people will rule yours and you will be punished for your impudence. If you apologize, start being nice to me, and check your privilege immediately, I might consider taking you as my personal servant, and allow you to have your ballgag loosened for a few hours each day, and only use a size 7 buttplug on you.
>>56
But your wrong you know. Conway's game of thug life was invented in that thread, and if it remained a while longer someone may have posted a state transfer function. But now you will never know. I may one day create conway's game of thug life, but I'll never share it with you. Only with people that provide public keys who can prove they aren't you and after they sign an agreement to never disclose it to you.
>>58
So start a thread dedicated to that idea. Don't start threads that are irrelevant to programming.
Name:
Anonymous2013-08-21 0:51
>>59
I doubt the person that wrote the post containing conway's game of thug life was the same that posted the op, seeing as the op was posted, in wait. let me check.
2011-11-20 12:02
Interesting information will collect in threads with an off topic op. This law holds constant in all of /prog/'s history.
>>60
If there's a programming idea in a spam thread, one should start a new thread with the new idea and let the old one go. Having good discussion does not excuse the posting of spam.
Name:
Anonymous2013-08-21 23:58
>>61
Interesting ideas can and do form from topics that are not related to programming. In fact, just about every programming job out there involves creating a service that escapes the constrained topic of programming. It's improving anything in the real world that can be aided with a computer.