

Yup… The nearest German fuel station is 10 minutes away, saved 23 cent per litre today. That’s despite our local Dutch fuel station being relatively cheap already.


Yup… The nearest German fuel station is 10 minutes away, saved 23 cent per litre today. That’s despite our local Dutch fuel station being relatively cheap already.


Which is a fairly high hurdle for an attacker in most instances.
With software projects training people that curl <link to their install script> | bash is totally fine and the insane amount of supply chain attacks lately it’s a critical bug that’s just begging to be exploited on single user systems.
So yes, patch your systems and definitely do not downplay this.
Or the flag of the Dutch province of South Holland:

I had to look up some numbers because I expected to see (…) the Netherlands on this map
Nah, Amsterdam was probably too tiny for this map.
Apollo 1:
Fire, I smell fire. Aaaaaaaaaaaaaah!
Roger Chaffee (presumed)
Outlook malfunctioning is extremely tame compared to the issues the early space program ran in to. Somehow this meme really rubs me the wrong way.
I suspect this is some kind of console error? I’ve only owned a SNES before becoming part of the PC master race, so just like the kids of today this early millennial has no idea what he’s looking at exactly.
It moves the value of register (a CPU memory cell) rbx to register rax. It’s not that important though.
Basically the comic shows that the CPU is happily chugging along, executing instructions when suddenly the keyboard sends an interrupt telling the CPU it must stop all work and listen to whatever it has to say.
That was how keyboards worked before USB (back when they used PS/2 or DIN connectors). With USB it’s the other way around: the device gets polled X times per second to check if it has any data to send.