Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 18th Aug 2009 23:24 UTC, submitted by John Mills
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"Bad engineering practices in the kernel" *HA*HA*HA* Boy, it seems nobody else has noticed.
Most of us(even the crackers) noticed that last week when news got out that a huge hole that had been open for 8 years was finally closed.
Seriously though, you should check your computer's capacitor, as it might have had a neutrino reflux in its core positronic memory that kept you from downloading that byte of data from the World Wide Web into your CPU. This is a known issue in linux-3.11.1.4 kernels but OpenBSD is unaffected.






Member since:
2006-01-03
*HA*HA*HA*
I do not care about Linux at all because of it's bad engineering practices of the kernel. But what has been done with the new slim PS3 to say that it's possible for me to use OpenBSD on there, did they tinker with the IRQ number configuration to block OS installs or something?
You actually have no idea what you're talking about, do you? *HA*HA*HA* "Bad engineering practices in the kernel" *HA*HA*HA* Boy, it seems nobody else has noticed. "tinker with the IRQ number configuration to block OS installs" *HA*HA*HA* I think they multiplexed the matrix vectors of the flooze controller, but that can be undone by injecting an encrypted protoframe in the GPU flow.