Ron Gilbert dissects a Death by Scrolling crash tied to a Daily Challenge and a Dinky compiler const-in-Yack quirk, then decides to ship a Steam fix before it returns.
Juhis launches “Roll the Zine,” an 8-page board/card game zine, pushing past web-native habits to learn print layout constraints while writing on games he enjoys.
Joar’s back in World of Warcraft gearing alts via weeklies and world quests ahead of the pre-patch, while still dabbling in ESO and Guild Wars 2 (spreadsheet pending).
Emily loves cozy Subnautica-adjacent Loddlenaut: vacuuming microplastics, recycling trash into upgrades, and befriending loddles (Dave can cope), with relaxing vibes and light story.
Scopique tracks Star Citizen PTU/Tech Preview bits—low-light tweaks, “Clearing the Air,” Aurora gold-standard, price surging—plus base-building/crafting blueprint tests as a big progression milestone.
Wilhelm covers EVE Online alliance politics as LAWN gets asked to leave the Imperium after 14 years, with Asher Elias framing it as a cultural-differences, low-drama split.
Warner says Jay Roach’s The Roses remake nails brighter comedy within the black-comedy frame, praising Cumberbatch/Colman’s banter and a timely update with smart-home tech gags.
Dave Winer argues nobody wants to be told how to think, suggests staying friends across politics while noting you may learn uncomfortable truths, and plugs Scripting News’ nightly email.
Jamie Zawinski drops another “PRANIC LIFT 777” oddity post—mostly a big image plus a trail of related weird-tech links back through cyberdecks, fonts, and cursed gear.
Bruce Schneier boosts a scientist-signed letter warning internet voting is insecure with no foreseeable fix, calling vendor claims—like Mobile Voting Foundation’s—misleading and dangerous for public-e
Bhagpuss riffs on never tracking his reading, the perils of book stacks, and why working in a bookshop limits reviewing, before steering toward Amy Rigby’s Girl To City.
Pixel One writes a haunting World of Warcraft vignette where Ilianah walks an intact-but-empty Dalaran, dragged back by the Infinite Dragonflight, until Lex’s steady presence anchors her.