Easy. Every year is the Year of the Linux Desktop™.
Easy. Every year is the Year of the Linux Desktop™.
The future as in this will dominate some day or as in this will be the best some day? Cause only one seems reasonable to me.
There’s research ongoing on having LLMs search for vulnerabilities. So who knows, LLMs hacking LLMs (in the wild) might be just around the corner.
What OP said. But here’s a more detailed answer courtesy of GPT-4:
Adding cat /dev/random > /dev/pty23
to your .profile
would result in an interesting situation whenever you start a login shell.
Behavior of the Command: The command cat /dev/random
continuously reads random data from the /dev/random
device file, which generates an endless stream of random bytes. Redirecting this to /dev/pty23
means it attempts to write this data to the pseudo-terminal device /dev/pty23
.
Impact on Shell Startup: When you add this to your .profile
, every time you start a login shell (like when you open a new terminal session), it will execute this command. Since /dev/random
produces an endless stream of data, the cat
command will not terminate on its own. This means your shell will be stuck executing this command, and you won’t get a prompt to enter new commands.
Interactive Shell Issue: The shell remains technically interactive, but because the cat
command doesn’t complete, you won’t get a chance to interact with it. The shell is effectively blocked by the cat
command continuously running.
Potential Problems: There’s a possibility that /dev/pty23
might not exist on your system, or you might not have the permission to write to it. In such cases, the command would fail, but it would still block the shell if it doesn’t exit properly.
Fixing the Issue: To regain control of your shell, you might need to edit your .profile
from a different context where it doesn’t get executed, like using a non-login shell or booting into a recovery mode.
In summary, it’s a kind of a “prank” command that can render your login shell unusable until you remove it from your .profile
. It’s an example of how powerful shell startup scripts can be, and also a reminder to be cautious about what gets added to them!
Good question. Maybe GitLens can help with that, if not the official GitHub extensions.
VSCode has had that feature for some months now. Maybe it’s still hidden behind an off-by-default setting, but it’s there and I use it.
Not a bad idea, but if possible, you want to skip loading the ad altogether, which is – to my understanding – what currently happens.
Oh my god
Do remember that the same Baerbock said that we (Germany/…) are at war with Russia.
You mean with the Micro SDs?
While we’re at it, I like to use --autostash
in addition.
All CPUs are Electron-based, if you think about it.
https://feddit.nl/post/16112837