Displaying 7 results from an estimated 7 matches for "nethack".
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netback
2015 Aug 31
3
COLUMNS and LINES environment variables
Hello openssh developers,
Instead of just playing nethack, I've been building a client that
would log in to nethack at alt.org and using a pipe to get the login data
from pwsafe directly onto the server.
All of this works brilliantly after playing with some stty magic (full
script in [0]), however, this way the terminal size is burned into
80x24, whic...
2015 May 18
2
[LLVMdev] Crash reporting in clang/lldb
+llvmdev
-llvm-dev
On Mon, May 18, 2015 at 4:28 PM, Vince Harron <vince at nethacker.com> wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> I would like to integrate crash reporting into Android developer tools,
> starting with lldb and clang. Google Breakpad seems like a reasonable
> option.
>
> https://code.google.com/p/google-breakpad/
>
> Of course, it will only be enabled...
2000 Sep 07
4
What's in a name
Hi all:
One of the things that struck me immediately about the OGG vorbis codec and
the OGG project in general were the names. When I was browsing the 2
websites some time ago, I failed to find mention of the relevance of either
of these. Since names often have some significance in the opensource
movement and these are somewhat unusual, I was wondering if someone could
comment on on OGG and
1999 Sep 28
0
Re: Linux GNOME exploit
...program using the GNOME libraries is vulnerable to a
> buffer overflow attack. The attack comes in the form:
>
> /path/to/gnome/prog --enable-sound --espeaker=$80bytebuffer
> The following exploit should work against any GNOME program, though I
> tried it on (the irony) /usr/games/nethack, which is SGID root by default
> on RH6.0. An attack on any program will look something like this:
>
> [xnec@redhack gnox]$ uname -a; cat /etc/redhat-release; id
> Linux redhack 2.2.9-19mdk #1 Wed May 19 19:53:00 GMT 1999 i686 unknown
> Linux Mandrake release 6.0 (Venus)
Humm it...
2007 Apr 12
0
[LLVMdev] Compiler name: Nāga
On Apr 12, 2007, at 12:57 PM, Michael McCracken wrote:
> Hi, the idea of a dragon theme reminded me of the dragon-like serpents
> called "Nāga" from Cambodian mythology, among other places.
Interesting, my only comment is if we pick this we need to just spell
it Naga.
Naga are also snake people in D&D (yea... I know).
>
> Here's a brief link explaining the
2000 Sep 07
0
AW: What's in a name
...nce in the opensource
> movement and these are somewhat unusual, I was wondering if someone could
> comment on on OGG and Vorbis in particular?
It's all over the website.
Or it was :)
IIRC, "ogg" was to do something by brute force/ignorance until you got what
you wanted, from Nethack, apparently.
Thats all I remember.
--
Teo de Hesselle
NV Networking
teo@nvnetworking.com
0416 215 289
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2007 Apr 12
7
[LLVMdev] Compiler name: Nāga
Hi, the idea of a dragon theme reminded me of the dragon-like serpents
called "Nāga" from Cambodian mythology, among other places.
Here's a brief link explaining the specific Cambodian meaning -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naga_(mythology)#N.C4.81gas_in_Cambodia
I like this as a name, because it's unique short and easy to type and
remember (as long as you omit the accent,