Battleship
Back when I was first getting into Python, I write up a battleship game. It's extremely simple, a single file script even, but does permit 2 players sharing the same screen & keyboard. Mitigating cheating is entirely on the user. I don't event know if it still works, but maybe I'll try it again at some point. It's probably hella outdated considering the age & I always wanted to add networking, so perhaps I'll re-write.
WiseEyesEnt.com Registrar
Finally initiated the transfer on the wiseeyesent.com domain registration, moving from AWS over to CloudFlare. The pricing looks good, so hopefully this goes smoothly enough. This is only the second time I believe I've transferred a personal domain, originally from HostGator (ooooold staff account) over to Amazon Registrar & now to CloudFlare.
P.S. 2025-12-11 transfer finally completed...
Enter the Gungeon
Finally beat Enter the Gungeon for the first time. 157.6 hours of gameplay. Still need to get the bullet that kills the past, fight the rat, travel to bullet hell, and kill the past of the other starter characters, plus unlock the new characters and kill their pasts too. There's so much to do in this game... It's a lot of fun though, but I really wish I had someone to play with me. Partner is not into these types of shooters.

Honey Heist
So First Nation's Day is here. Went to a friend's house for dinner (pork belly) and an online of game of Honey Heist with friends. If you haven't played before, it's a lot of fun and perfect for one shots. They pulled the caper off with only like 6 deaths they were directly responsible for and without losing any player characters (other than the one who couldn't make it). I've uploaded the game notes in case anyone wanted to take a gander:
https://news.wiseeyesent.com/20251127_HoneyHeist.txt
Winston gets the MVP for blocking a burst of automatic fire from a Hunniburton guard to save Bear Grilles, plus stabbing like 4 people, including Teddy Ruxpin.
Networking
I started doing some work on the network. Idle hands & all that. Now the network doesn't work. Also, I wound up on sco.wikipedia.org somehow. That was interesting... I might use this more often
Holidays, et al
PayPal's cart functionality is broken & GMail is noticeably lagging. (GMail also has an insane number of background activity for a single tab. I guess that's why people use clients.) Plus roads were hella congested (& this place is already famous for the World's Worst Driversᵀᴹ) so I guess it's officially the holidays.
I got my router's webUI working through https with a valid domain qualified certificate though, which is pretty cool. Still working on ansibling the network, but there's over a decade of technical involved in that, so it'll be a progressive thing.
I'm working on setting up a new system to demo projects, but dunno how long that'll take. Also planning a session of Honey Heist with friends. Life is certainly getting busy enough these days.
Babyback Ribs
Forgot to mention this, but while I was working on some NTP stuff for my network, I plugged pool.ntp.org into the address bar & got redirected to this: https://cdn.maxhost.io/Ribs.mp4
Wow. What the hell? Sometimes the internet is a beautiful place, but I still have found no explanation for this thing or why it exists.
IEC 61850
til; IEC 61850 exists. Of course there's an international standard for substation / grid device communication & reporting. I just hadn't heard of it before. Was reading over their TISSUE (Technical Issue) database user guide & actually found it to be somewhat interesting, particularly the state machine description.
Y'all read Ted the Caver yet?
Y'all read Ted the Caver yet? Read it a long time ago, back when AngelFire websites were normal & I had a GeoCities of my own. Good stuff. Probably birthed the "creepy-pasta" movement for the internet.
OnCall published
I published a chunk of software, OnCall (v2), written for work. It uses basic-ass PHP with builtin packages because the environment hosting it is a dark-site, which prevents the easy inclusion of any libraries or frameworks that would have made this much easier, i.e. Django. The application itself is a ground up replacement for a predecessor written by the co-worker who trained me up on our Linux foot print, but has since been unable to maintain it due to their workload. As such, the database design, attribute names, and even layout are heavily influenced by this predecessor. I tried to follow the original as much as possible to encourage ease of use for employees while adding functionality, such as being able to make edits directly through the web app and building the entire schedule template system.
It's the first bit of PHP programming I've done in quite a while (about 12 years or more?) so is messy as hell, but it's functional. Technically the project is under active maintenance and development, but realistically that's entirely dependent upon having enough free time to actually work on it. Future developments will be ported to this public version for as long as I maintain the project.
I've also been writing up a few API clients for relaying metrics and alerts from our appliance based systems (Rubrik, Nutanix, HPE Synergy/Composer2) over to our Prometheus monitoring system. Due to the dark-site infrastructure, we have no access to public tools and I don't want to trust community maintained projects (which would require requesting security audits for every updated release and manually applying said updates). I've been writing these in PowerShell script predominantly because most of our systems run Windows Server (goddesses help me) so I try to make things that can natively run on the jumphosts with both access to the target appliances and the Prometheus ingestion. I'll work on porting those over to public distribution.