Bale, yes and no. What that means is Donavin re-registered all his scripts, thus overwriting the old data file, since it read it as having 0 entries (unable to deserialize) but could overwrite it just fine. AHHHH!!!
Good thing there are daily backups!
Since birthdays, kingdom events, server lockouts, tests of proficiency in Korean, and illness have all conspired against this getting fixed with any modicum of rapidity, not to mention I now have two data files to merge into the new system regardless, I'm going to say proceed with re-registration and continue using the old registry. I strongly doubt we'll reach 100K again before I'm done with the rewrite. When I've finished I will take the old date file and the new one we've built and merge them into the new system.
@xKiv: Hehehe. English is rather a hot mess; I teach it every day to non-native speakers, so I deal with its idiosyncrasies daily. But I'm a bit surprised at your comment, which appears to discount etymology, lexicography, and linguistics as valid sciences. The rules are descriptive and not prescriptive, but that doesn't make them illogical. Spelling matters and is indicative of pronunciation(s) -- I don't teach general pronunciation rules to my ESL students to screw with their minds, but because they are genuinely helpful rules for the majority of situations. Where they don't apply, it's usually a word which came to us from another language, complete with its other-language spelling and other-language pronunciation rules, and the spelling is a clue as to which language and thus which pronunciation rules. Often, multiple rulesets apply and are equally valid (such as the varying pronunciations of "buffet"). That makes English both all-inclusive and almost impenetrably complicated, but not senseless.
@Winterbay: I seem to recall reading that poem long, long ago, but rereading it now, it was as fresh and delicious as if it were the first time. It's marvelous! Thanks for sharing.