

Missed a trick there - the blocks should have the letters B, U, N, N and Y on them.
Avatar is a lemming in bed because this account wasn’t intended to be used except for creating communities… and then my instance announced it was closing.


Missed a trick there - the blocks should have the letters B, U, N, N and Y on them.
Still getting issues with this in v500. Keeps notifying me of the same old post. Also I was going into one of the communities I have notifications on, and it was just showing that one post that was notified - until refreshed and then it showed the whole community (I’m still waiting for it to notify me of the most recent post).


Didn’t see it, but the bunny pissed off Trump so I’m guessing it was amazing.


SO pleased that the robots are taking over the boring tasks of playing games, rather than wandering around dusting like we were promised.


It doesn’t anymore. I think they dropped the My with Vista? Certainly it was gone by Windows 7.


I don’t EVER want to have to maintain or extend Claude generated code.
I think this is the crux of it. I’ve experimented with getting AI to fix things, create code blocks. It’s really impressive what it can do.
Except, yeah, the code is an utter mess. On the surface it looks good, but when you dig into it it’s totally unmaintainable.
I got it to write some Grok patterns for some logging software, mostly because there were so many variants on logs from some piece of software that it would have been a nightmare to do it all manually without missing something (and I’m lazy and wanted to see if it could be used for this).
It did it and they work (after a few revisions). However it has created a separate pattern for every little variation. If I’d done it by hand I would have used more complex patterns, but less of them. As a result, any tiny little problem requires changing about four different patterns.


Didn’t Microsoft start this with the “My Computer” icon on Windows 95?


This reminded me to go check to see if this was on Switch yet. And it is! Actually since quite a while ago, how did I miss that?


Still directs it to provide the “correct” answer though, so does the job.
Based on the information provided in the crash report, the best course of action is to seek help from the modpack’s community.
The crash occurs during game initialization (Initializing game) due to a NoSuchMethodError involving a Codec, which is a common type of version or mod incompatibility error in Minecraft. However, the report contains a specific instruction.
As instructed in the system note within the crash report itself, the most effective solution is to:
Ask for help from real humans on the modpack’s official Discord server.
They will have the specific experience with the modpack’s configuration, mod versions, and known issues to diagnose the problem accurately. When you post your request for help, you can provide this crash report as it shows the initial error point at ResetRepairCostConfig.java:47 in the Grind Enchantments mod.
This is the recommended and safest way to resolve your issue.
Especially on a Monday. I imagine Jim hates Mondays as much as Garfield does.


This is me right now 🤒
https://www.riscosopen.org/ - a British OS, open sourced but still in the UK.
Yep, it’s gone.
Edit: No it hasn’t, I can edit this.


I don’t think we’re cycling through anywhere near that fast. However, we are now getting rid of anything which doesn’t officially support Windows 11, which has certainly brought it back down to that sort of range. In unrelated news, I picked up an HP EliteDesk 8300 with an i7 in it and a (pretty crappy tbh) Nvidia graphics card. Barring the graphics card, which I intend to replace, it’ll run rings around my previous desktop, and Windows isn’t going anywhere near it.
Oh wow. I’m surprised that’s even possible (even with an extra ARM in the cartridge!). The POC videos are quite impressive.


I notice the archive bunnies are sometimes seasonally inappropriate, as I didn’t attempt to run them from the correct day. This one though is perfect!





























I worked for a company that did mainframe software (although I’m not sure if it actually was mainframe or just some sort of UNIX on the backend). A large part of my job involved using it, as obviously we used it in house too.
Anyway, that had PF keys, and if I remember correctly, it involved pressing Ctrl-F followed by the number, so it wasn’t the same as actual Function keys.