I've been on the internet since the early 90:ies, and this does happen semi-regularly, especially during the last decade. But I have never in my life experienced such situations stemming from an agreeing reflection/interjection during face-to-face communication. Sometimes it feels like people are (un)intentionally looking for reasons to disagree rather than anything else.
I agree with them, your original post lacked clarity. I propose that the reason these types of conversations are less likely in person is because there is typically no log of exactly what was said and people tend to get defensive and narratives change. This makes it a pointless endeavor.
I would suggest, rather than wondering why people on the internet point things like this out, maybe wonder how many people in real life never bothered and just write you off.
But why did you code it to fetch stars at all? You would have had to go out of your way to do that. If AI has written most of this I suspect people will be less inclined to contribute.
The AI player just casts the first card it has the mana to cast, regardless of if any normal player would do it. As an example Sparky will gladly cast a kill spell on their own creature if the opponent has none, or cast protection spells on the opponents creatures if it has no creatures itself. This is far different than duels of the planewalkers.
From what I recall from aforementioned incident, I was not able to reliably prove that client app (Eclipse) really used Windows' curl (I would have guessed that such software would have it's own internal stack for network connections, but my knowledge in this area is non-existent), only that it exhibited suspiciously similar problems.
So I came to conclusion that it either uses that CURL or CURL that is similarly broken as the Windows' one. I was unable (or more precisely haven't even tried) to swap Windows curl with the "better" one to see if it fixes Eclipse Maven. Result back then was only that HTTP2 was disabled on the Maven server and all (windows) clients (both of them) were happy. (Other might become less happy since it presumably slowed something down.)
Thanks Jerry, you’ve managed to finally get me to switch off google search for good! It seemed quite a difficult thing to do in the past, but finally something has clicked that made it feel like the natural thing to do.
Are you sure its a tarnished lead? Lots of lightning cables have one tarnished lead (often on each side) from arcing. If I remember correctly using such a cable in a new iPhone could even damage the matching pin inside the phone, leading to the situation where it would start arcing on a non-broken cable (damaging the same leads on the new cable).