• Quite (unregistered)

    If knowing your English dodegey is, get a cowoorker to verrifidate it

  • (nodebb)

    Given the level of English displayed in the rest of the item, using "Thrid" as if it is a correct spelling of "Trhid" is neither here nor there.

  • Foo AKA Fooo (unregistered)

    Notably, "tangle" even has 938715642 syllables, according to the same page. I feel there's an OEIS entry hidden ...

  • Anonymous') OR 1=1; DROP TABLE wtf; -- (unregistered)

    The Jira screenshot is a double WTF: the obvious negative 1.5 billion price tag, and then they also appeared to have multiplied that by the number of users to get the per-user price instead of dividing by the number of users.

  • (nodebb)

    TRWTF, of course, is that English has a need for tools to work out how many syllables there are in any given word.

  • (nodebb) in reply to Gurth

    No. TRWTF is that anyone thinks it does. English is not at fault here.

  • (nodebb)

    The Jira screenshot is fitting for the quality of the product itself.

  • (nodebb) in reply to Steve_The_Cynic

    Did you mean "hair nor their"?

  • Ff (unregistered)

    Thrid!

  • (nodebb) in reply to zomgwtf

    Posibbly.

  • Whosy (unregistered)

    If you look at the number of each of those results, it's merely the numbers 1 through 9 randomly rearranged. I'm thinking this is a deliberate attempt to get you to open the page rather than rely on a search preview.

  • Lurk (unregistered) in reply to Anonymous') OR 1=1; DROP TABLE wtf; --

    ...multiplied that by the number of users to get the per-user price instead of dividing... You haven't met all =that many sales bods, have you? :)

  • Ecphasisinfotech (unregistered)
    Comment held for moderation.
  • (nodebb) in reply to Anonymous') OR 1=1; DROP TABLE wtf; --

    they also appeared to have multiplied that by the number of users to get the per-user price instead of dividing by the number of users.

    Not necessarily. It could just be bad (or intentionally misleading) design. IIf you just read it in order you can parse it as "-$1.5 billion per user (average), -$15 billion per month". The fact that the "per user (average)" text is stylistially and spatially associated with the second figure rather than the first could just be an effort to get you to think of the big, bold, numerically smaller number as the total.

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