• (nodebb)

    The Deutsche Post time travel is trivial. Their app is an aspx page, so some flavor of .Net. The 01.01 timestamps on those two intermediate stops are simply missing or uninitialized values. The zero epoch for .Net is Jan 1 of year 1 CE. Which if formatted as "dd.mm." becomes "01.01." Yawn.

  • Darren (unregistered)

    Disney - and all streaming services - have always done per minute pricing. It's just that it's easier to sell it to customers as £15 per month rather than 0.035p per minute.

  • Joe (unregistered) in reply to Darren

    No, it's just that the price is variable. If you watch one minute in a month then it's $15 per minute. If you watch two then it's $7.50 per minute. And so on.

    (obviously we're both joking)

  • Hmmmm (unregistered)

    The inverted "infinity" is a pretty wild! I wonder if that's due to a '-' acting as a control character for that!

  • Álvaro González (github)

    In fascinated by the upside-down infinity. What kind of bug can cause something like that?

  • COBOL Dilettante (unregistered)

    Actually their percentages are always like that i.e. mirrored through the horizontal axis, it's just their test data only included 10%, 30% and 80% so they never noticed

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