That could be possible but for the moment I didn’t encouter any problem with cat. I think I’m going to stick with it for the time being.
That could be possible but for the moment I didn’t encouter any problem with cat. I think I’m going to stick with it for the time being.
Yep that’s right, but I use fdisk to check my drives before writing on them and it also requires sudo…
My favorite way to create a boot media is simply to use cat. No arguments, no shenanigans just a cat into the device :
cat debian.iso > /dev/sda
okay, that is awesome
Yeah it feels like they tried something different. With the first one, all the big ennemies were underlings of the Lady. Here, even though they inhabit the city (except for the hunter), they are not linked to the Thin man. It’s a bit confusing.
But overhaul the game is still really good and scary. IMO being chased is one of the scariest thing, so stressfull.
You can also configure vim to use the first clipboard (works with nvim but never tested on vim).
there is a puzzle game called The Pedestrian where you control the sign man through signs
Wait, 10 meters between cars ?? In traffic ?
It’s actually a really good question. What you’re explaining is called a collision, by creating the same hash with different numbers you can succesfully login.
This why some standard hashing function become deprecated and are replaced when someone finds a collision. MD5, which was used a lot to hash passwords or files, is considered insecure because of all the collisions people could find.
Oh right, my bad x) I agree, it’s a little bit akward to use su then cat everytime.