For the UDP broadcast, you should be able to catch and change them with simple firewall rules, you’d catch packets with a destination address of the broadcast address and send them to a chain that rewrites the destination
Pronouns: any. You can’t get it wrong
For the UDP broadcast, you should be able to catch and change them with simple firewall rules, you’d catch packets with a destination address of the broadcast address and send them to a chain that rewrites the destination
So throw an error at runtime on that macro, most workbooks aren’t the target of a macro
They said ~/
I don’t think there’s any protection for the current user’s home directory
That’s a bit much, perhaps though they should use a real mode OS
Yeah, there’s a Debian implementation of GNU/hurd. Debian recommend you run it in a VM
The Linux kernel (the part that gives Linux the name) is antithetical to Linux philosophy? I could understand it being contrary to GNU philosophy
I bought a house with the money saved from buying windows*
*This is a lie
It might have been the blackbird board that was fully open
Thats odd. The presentation claimed only the network controller was closed, until their work
All of it. Computers, phones, cable modems, cameras cars.
We need it to be open, especially for networked equipment so we can keep it secure and running after the manufacturer stops supporting it.
It’s about everything. Computers, phones, the computer that makes your car work. Every bit of electronics that boots - that probably includes your smoke detector and oven
The good thing about vim or Emacs is that when you know the shortcuts they are so much faster to use than mouse and menu editors (though Emacs has a menu, and supports mouse, which smooths the learning curve)
So “vim can run it” by letting you open a terminal? Emacs has telnet built in, let alone Eliza
Vim can’t automatically handle other key maps? I’m sure it worked as designed in my dvorak system
:w to write, not :, (Dvorak has comma where qwerty has w)
I get it if the keyboard doesn’t use the letters we use, but that person could type in Lemmy with all the normal letters
Why would you have closed Emacs? You can do everything in Emacs
I’m sure you’re right. It used to be complicated to set up printers, bluetooth, audio, but even then once set up they were fine. Now all those and just about anything else you need to manage on the machine has an easy GUI
My wife’s computer runs Linux and she’s never had to use a terminal (she’s not a techie type)