• Lol, this both shows how bad most models are… But also how damn good the two big OSS models are, DeepSeek and Kimi.

    • What an acid trip of a site. It updated while I was scrolling and legit thought I was having a flashback.

      • I ran into the same thing - they seem to change (potentially to other outputs from the same model?) when you click on the Question mark and go back.

        • Question mark says they are updated every minute, even gives you a prompt.

          Watching for several minutes, none of then was good except Kimi K2. Sure, not every time, but solid third of them was actually working, while the others scored a perfect 0.

          Also, as a Kimi K2 user (because Kagi), I approve. I don’t use Kimi K2 for coding, though, because JetBrains doesn’t offer that, but I use it in Kagi Assistant.

            • Did it show the correct time? Did it tick correctly? From my observations, even clocks that looked okay had like wrong second speed, swapped hour and minute, or was rotated altogether.

              • Yeah it was showing the correct time and right tick speed. But it was only one of the clocks on that model. The rest were wrong.

              • Yeah it was showing the correct time and right tick speed. But it was only one of the clocks on that model. The rest were wrong.

    • Oh my god. I love that so much.

      Now I need to do that but randomize which one is displayed ….

  • That really is more logical. (Except that the initial element generally goes in the top slot of the clock. Note that 12 is the first hour both of AM and of PM.)

  • Wait until you learn how months are numbered in some programming languages.

    The clever documentation calls it “months since January”.

      • JavaScript is in that set of “some” languages. Most of it ties back to C’s struct tm which zero-indexes months (0-11), weekdays (0-6), and the rarely used day of year (0-365), as well as offsetting years by 1900.

        The odd man out, so to speak, is the date (or “mday” as it’s called there), which is in the range 1-31. One (Perl) book I own suggests that the zero-based ones are used to index arrays of strings and implies this one is different because it generally isn’t used that way.

        But anyway, these are decisions made 50 years ago that still haunt us.

      • Imgur have blocked the uk because they don’t want to have to deal with ID shit our government pushed through without properly thinking it through

      • That’s odd. Here is the URL - https://i.imgur.com/YAGpXPd.png - it’s just straight-up an imgur image. This is literally the first time I am hearing that this can happen to imgur images.:-(

        The image is the speechless stick figure meme. Here, I found another source:

        img

        That seems not very welcoming to exclude people from viewing such images!