From the interview of Richard M. Stallman, I learned that when Richard Stallman joined the Artificial Intelligence Lab at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 1971, the community of programmers (or say hackers) at AI Lab used to run a free operating system probably developed by themselves.
N...
> Initially there were no passwords, and a user could work on ITS without logging on.[3] Logging on was considered polite, though, so people knew when one was connected.
lol
"Logging on was considered polite"
> To deal with a rash of incidents where users sought out flaws in the system in order to crash it, a novel approach was taken. A command that caused the system to crash was implemented and could be run by anyone, which took away all the fun and challenge of doing so. It did, however, broadcast a message to say who was doing it.
I would pick 4.3.3 because it has the corrected entry for BASIC and "Portrait of J. Random Hacker" is only intermittently racist, but earlier has a strong case for it
@Pandya The Stallman biography "Free as in Freedom" has a reasonable amount of detail. Of course, it's not a primary source, but it also has references.
The Levy book "Hackers" also has a chapter on Stallman's early days. By definition, since it was published in the 1980s, I believe. I can't remember much about it, but it might be worth looking at.
@FaheemMitha I mean that I am already looking back in nostalgia to when the earth didn't have extensive radioactive and chemical pollution. No need to wait for future generations.
I'm currently logged in Stack Exchange Network with Stack Exchange. Now, if I tried to join other community by "Join Community" button, it asks me to singup instead of creating account with existing profile.
When you are already logged in and if you joins the community, system just ask for the...
@Kiwy Well, a proper nuclear war, with missiles being exchanged, and million of people being torched in the nuclear fire. Courtesy of American technology.
@PrabhjotSingh I think Kiwy was talking about nuclear weapons development.
People have been trying to stop, or even slow down, this insane activity for many years. But with basically no effect, at least on the US and its allies.
> On 5 February 2003 a large blue curtain was placed to cover this work at the UN, so that it would not be visible in the background when Colin Powell and John Negroponte gave press conferences at the United Nations.
I'm seeing a question in the list of questions for Meta. When I follow the link to view the question, the title graphic changes back to 'UNIX & Linux' and there is an info block at the bottom saying 'this question was migrated from unix.meta.stackexchange.com 13 hours ago' ...
I thought I cleared my cache, but it still shows up.
I search/try to write short script (for if loop) to do grep in file by whole cat output.
Already I tried
#!/bin/bash
find -name 'xmlrpc.php' -execdir bash -c '
if [ -e ".htaccess" ] ; then
if grep -qxf /home/tstepien/Desktop/code/testing/addthat.txt .htaccess
then
echo found
else
...
Like in topic.
I search/try to write short script (for if loop) to do grep in file by whole cat output.
Already I tried
#!/bin/bash
if grep `cat /home/tstepien/Desktop/code/testing/addthat.txt` .htaccess
then
echo found
else
(cat /home/tstepien/Desktop/code/testing/addthat.txt
@0xSheepdog Yeah, I migrated it from Meta as soon as I saw it pop up.
There's an extra item in the toolbar for moderators with a drop-down that shows the most recent Meta posts. Its icon shows how many unread Meta posts there are since last I checked. That's how I could spot it quickly.
I just exactly the same problem just now, with exactly the same symptoms, on upgrading from stretch (9.8) to Debian buster/testing.
I came across this thread, which mentioned the possibility that the scandb daemon was holding on to the scanner. To quote from the thread:
Found the culprit....
SA...
An answer to an old question of mine...
I.e. the bit that says:
> Finally, does anyone know how to figure out whether a process is holding on to a USB scanner, and if so, which one?