Recent Error'd

Error'd features fun error messages and other visual oddities from the world of IT.

Jan 2022

Time After Time

by in Error'd on

This week's submissions really aren't about time, they've just been sitting around a bit and need to get used up before they go bad. Or as the maestro used to say: "You might as well eat it... I'm only going to throw it away!"

An anonymous reader waffles "I do want to answer but I'm only half sure."


Time Enough to Cry

by in Error'd on

Does anybody really care about time?

Angela A. cares. "TGI(T|F)" she announces. "The days just run together!"


Up Up Down Down Left Right Left...

by in Error'd on

...Right B A. Right? Every so often, someone sends us a submission with a hidden agenda. Of course we get the usual solicitations for marriageable exotic beauties and offers to trade linkspam locations. But then there are the really interesting ones. Maybe they're legitimate, maybe they're photoshopped or otherwise faked, and maybe they're an attempt to bypass someone's ban on political propaganda or quack science. In any case, there isn't any of that here this week, but we're saving them up and maybe we'll feature a future issue of spot the fraud for you.

First up is dog lover George with a hysterical spam-blocking email address, sharing a help message that must have been crafted by Catbert himself. "My sixty seconds of glory awaits!" he howls, but then whimpers "I will be real disappointed if the agent isn't [Gone in Sixty Seconds headliner] Nicolas Cage."


Everything Old is New Again

by in Error'd on

Whenever there's a major change in the world, it always takes application developers a little time to adjust. Remember when the US government thought it would be a great idea to mess around with their Daylight Saving Time schedule with only two years warning? (I'm guessing nobody remembers the fiddling done by earlier administrations because they were too young to care, or not born yet.) Two years warning probably seemed like plenty to non-technical legislators, not thinking about all the software that was in place with built-in calendars. Well, someone has apparently decided to one-up a measly time change, by inventing something called a New YEAR. This resets the entire calendar, and it must be a novel practice because surely websites wouldn't break due to some routine event that has been happening for at least a dozen years or more, right? Right?

Aspiring Poké trainer Valts S. began a long long time ago far far away.