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VVVVVV is very simple game but exceptionally well made. Tight controls coupled with interesting level layouts made it both a puzzle to solve (how to do a section) and then required dexterity to execute it.

And music in this game is top tier.

I remember getting it in a bundle which I bought for some other game, and VVVVVV turned out to be my favorite.


I think they probably got a batch of these really cheap in the first place, because those servers were offered without the setup fee initially. It was during the soccer World Cup in Germany.


I cannot find the link now, but it was mentioned that it was ASRock mobos.


Thanks. This comment above does mention ASRock: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43112594

On the other hand, dmidecode output in the article shows:

Manufacturer: Dell Inc. Product Name: 0H3K7P


Do Hetzner servers even run IPMI?

For dedicated servers, you have to schedule KVM access in advance, so I assume they need to move some hardware and plug into to your server.

This would mean that IPMI is most likely not available or disabled.


Not anymore, but you can abuse pstore to know about last messages from before reboot


I have two AX42's. One has been stable since I got it during the Eurocup discount period. The other got replaced 2 times so far, but it looks like the latest replacement is holding up. So, it's like 50% failure rate based on my small sample. I guess only Hetzner and ASRock know the real numbers.


Relative.

For example, the page:

https://website/blog/1-post

contains:

href="2-post"

Browsers and other bots like Google Bot correctly interpret this as a link to

https://website/blog/2-post

While OpenAI crawler goes to:

https://website/blog/1-post/2-post

I wonder is there some way to report this bug to them?



I actually think OpenAI is right, unless you have a base url tag? That’s a relative url and its relative to the current url you are on, not the root domain


I built a Home Inventory software back in 2006 called Attic Manager:

https://guacosoft.com/attic/

In the first few years it only sold a couple of copies per quarter, but then Intuit decided to discontinue support for their Quicken Home Inventory programs and users got stuck. I added the ability to import that data and then the sales started doing well. It has tapered off in the past three years but I still get some months over $500 during the year. I haven't really done any marketing, as it's just a Home Inventory program I made for myself, to keep track of stuff when we were moving to a new home.

As far as I know, Attic Manager is still the only program which can load QHI data.


Looks like AI is becoming a perfect excuse to do whatever you like.

It's like having a dangerous dog that usually doesn't bite, but you really cannot know if it will change its mind one day. Do you just let such dog walk the streets without owner supervision?


> It's like having a dangerous dog that usually doesn't bite, but you really cannot know if it will change its mind one day.

In other words, a pit bull.


Agreed. Promising stuff like "Hey we built this because everything else is bad" and then years later selling it to a company that turns it bad is somehow even worse than classic bait and switch.


Vultr has hard limits by default.

Hetzner also for CPU use, and last time I checked the traffic would drop to slower bandwidth if you pass some limit. I think they still charge you, though.


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