Remind me to change the combination on my luggage
Surely, you’re joking?
I am joking, and don’t call me Shirley.
Roger, Roger!
What’s your vector, Victor?
9806 oddly unused
I think there are individual spots that are bright or dim for no reason because of random noise, up in the no-particular-pattern wilderness
Why’s 7410 so popular? Do people really like Low-mid range AMD APUs from 2015?
Maybe people are setting it up at home using a numberpad? In that case it would be just running a finger down the left side.
That makes a lot more sense. I’m part of the TKL life so I’d probably never notice something like that.
Great… now I can’t remember my PIN.
Anyone else getting a blank page? I had to go into inspect element and remove {opacity: 0} on the body to see anything.
It’s set to fade in from 0 opacity, for some sort of unnecessary “ooh look it’s fancy” effect. My guess is that if you check the console you’ll find that it hit some exception before it completed its little fade-in effect.
It seems to be caused by the FediAct addon, which doesn’t make any sense. Disabling the addon fixes the page without needing a reload, so it must be a CSS issue rather than an exception. Edit: it seems the addon is overriding the
fadeIn
keyframe, but it looks fixed in the github version.Might be worth reaching out to the addon authors. Hard to say whether the page or the addon is at fault, but they might be interested to know it even if it’s the page’s fault.
It looks like it’s the addon’s fault, and has already been fixed in the github version. It’s also been abandoned, so it’s probably not worth keeping around anyway.
What’s the big streak at 1000-1031, 1100-31 and 1200-1231?
It could be brith date, but why only 10-12 specifically? I thought birth months were more normal distributed.
Lotta baby making going on in winter months.
I think that’s the overlap between the dense region of PINs that start with 11, 12, or 13 (similar to the dense regions that start with 21, 22, 23, 31, etc), and the dense square region of month+day dates.
I got a PIN assigned by my bank back in the 1980s, and it is in that range. I always assumed it was random, because how easy is it to generate a 4-digit random number? But maybe they gave out PINs more like safe combinations. I don’t think you could change them back then, either.
I think that specific block is also more likely to be a street address in a city. So it has two reasons to be common easy to remember numbers.