• Hanzito (unregistered)

    JavaScript 2.0 features a third "empty" value, and they've been using it already. The full string is "nullnullfrist".

  • (nodebb)

    -328°C would conventionally correspond to -55K, which (because of the definition of negative thermodynamic temperature) is, in fact, very hot, which might well explain the 16000+ km/h winds (something in excess of Mach 13 at ground level).

    But -37°C is definitely on the brisk side (for the Leftpondians in the audience, think -35°F).

  • (nodebb)

    I think ullnullf is probably the floating point null.

  • Roby McAndrew (unregistered)

    I think ullnullf is somewhere in Wales

  • OldCoder (unregistered) in reply to WTFGuy

    Nah. Ullnullf is the name of the Icelandic exchange student over here earning a few bucks.

  • richarson (unregistered)

    "Comments sent to their technical team over the years, including those with good reproduceable bugs, tend to go unanswered, unfortunately."

    Yeah, those mails probably went to /dev/ullnullf.

  • Erwin (unregistered)

    I suspect something like null\nullnull\f

  • Neveranull (unregistered)

    Ullnullf is ullnullf already!

  • Mike D. (unregistered)

    The first one reminds me of the Alderaan weather forecast t-shirt I have: https://www.geekalerts.com/u/alderaan-5day-forecast-shirt.jpg

  • (nodebb)

    Aussie McDonald's mobile app is crap, too. I uninstalled it more than a year ago because it was forcing itself to the foreground. The support comment sounded like they didn't want to care but weren't allowed to show that.

  • (nodebb)

    Aussie McDonald's mobile app is crap, too. I uninstalled it more than a year ago because it was forcing itself to the foreground. The support comment sounded like they didn't want to care but weren't allowed to show that.

  • Tinkle (unregistered)

    The first one is perfectly accurate:

    On Monday the earth gets knocked out of orbit and has a wobble towards the sun before getting flung out into deep space. This freezes the earth solid. so all the clocks stop.

    After a few thousand years earth is captured by another star, settling into a Goldilocks orbit on Tuesday, resuming the clocks..

    The British would then be heard to say 'It got a bit blowy the last couple of days.'

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