Unless you were largely cognisant during the late 90s, it's very hard to get across to you just _how_ bristling with positive energy computing was back then, just **look** at this opening screen, it screams "ARE YOU READY TO LEARN MOTHERF*CKER?!".
It has dolphins, in the clouds. How many smartphone apps welcome you with dolphins in clouds?
I have noticed in my time as a developer that the best way to solve my problems is to go reading the source code of projects I am using. for instance, I went reading through the chromium source code recently to figure out how to enable its perfetto-based profiler. I was ultimately successful but it took like, 4-6 hours of reading unfamiliar code. this is a level of pathological curiosity which I don't think is present in a lot of people—but it also, like, betrays a lack of fear? I've noticed most programmers are scared of code that isn't their own. I'm not trying to toot-my-own-horn here. I just want to know why I'm so different than virtually every coworker I've ever had. an old manager told me once it was curiousity. maybe it's also empathy? if someone wrote something, it is better to read it and see their side-of-things. what I see happen most of the time instead is treating all software as a suspicious black box with no interest in what might be inside.
I am very satisfied to report the 2013 game Michael Brough and I made, "BECOME A GREAT ARTIST IN JUST 10 SECONDS", has now been re-released on Itch with modern OS compatibility.
Originally made for the Ludum Dare game jam, GREAT ARTIST is an unhelpful art program, offering a large number of art production tools none of which work as you expect. Think of it as immersion training in glitch art, or a toy for babies producing colorful lights and sounds. Anyway, it's fun.
https://mermaidindustries.itch.io/become-a-great-artist-in-just-10-seconds
Do i know anyone who has access to a Cisco Unified Communications Manager (CallManager) server who could help me provision some new firmware for an ATA191-K9?
I managed an e-commerce server for about ten years. It grew from a small local shop into a major national business, even handling international orders. They expanded to the point where they reduced their local brick-and-mortar store hours because the bulk of their revenue was coming from online sales.
Then one seller came along and convinced them that switching to Shopify would be the key to growing even further. Apparently, their €130/month bare-metal redundant setup - which boasted a calculated uptime of 99.995% over 10 years - just wasn't cutting it anymore.
They’ve been on Shopify for about six months now, and every now and then, I still get the alerts. I left the monitoring active via Uptime Kuma and ran the numbers. Over the last six months, their uptime dropped below 98%.
In other words, in just six months, they’ve been down for almost as many hours as they were during the entire previous decade.
I contacted the client - not because I want to take over the hosting again, but just to understand what on earth happened (we're on excellent terms). Their response was: "We don't know, but if it happened on Shopify, it means it was bound to happen anyway."
As long as we keep swallowing the lie that "the cloud" and "tech giants" are always the right solution for us, we completely deserve the cloud and the tech giants.
Kitsune Tails is 35% off on Steam and itch and very queer! https://kitsunegames.com/kitsunetails
Or help our queer studio survive into the future by getting four of our games as a bundle for $17.99 on itch (https://itch.io/s/192877/summer-sale-2026) or $18.75 on Steam (https://store.steampowered.com/bundle/15673/Kitsune_Games_Complete_Pack/)
Includes:
- Kitsune Tails and its prequel Kitsune Zero
- MidBoss, a possession based traditional roguelike, top-10 best rated on Steam
- Ultra Hat Dimension, an adorable push puzzle game about hats and getting punched for wearing them
Trans woman, bisexual, someone's fiancée, forever a programmer, poly, and former total mess
Avatar by mavica