The windows beta community is so interesting because it's like "omg have you ever seen build 69420? It is so ballin". And then you look it up online and it's something like "This version of Windows was first seen on a GitHub screenshot of a screencap at a developers conference in Luxembourg at about 2:43 AM UTC and was subsequently leaked a few minutes later after a USB drive with malicious software was carelessly plugged into a Windows engineers machine that had AutoPlay enabled. It is fundamentally identical to the final release except any sound from the windows audio service results in a bugcheck, and that pressing the up arrow key on the keyboard causes a machine to explode"
@soulfirethewolf nt build 69420? legitimately if built today would call itself build 3884 in a bunch of places, breaking a ton of things, because of 16-bit build number overflow
@Rairii idek how Windows builds are numbered really. They mostly seem to be kind of random with some system I don't quite understand.
@soulfirethewolf sequential but with jumps when a release branch is created