All off topic discussions go here. Everything from the funny thing your cat did to your favorite tv shows. Non-programming computer questions are ok too.
Brynet-Inc wrote:
It was also developed for the original AT&T UNIX systems it should be treated with a bit more respect!.
I will treat C programmers as they treat basic programmers and as they treat me.
Now BASIC for example is a sad sorry excuse for a language
I demand all the people i have helped to say they respect! me.
If my demand are not met, i will go to the dark side and be come a hacker
They treat ASM programmers like GODS.
I am off now to work on my new site, no C programmers are allowed
Last edited by Dex on Mon Nov 13, 2006 10:30 am, edited 1 time in total.
Brynet-Inc wrote:
It was also developed for the original AT&T UNIX systems it should be treated with a bit more respect!.
I will treat C programmers as they treat basic programmers and as they treat me.
Now BASIC for example is a sad sorry excuse for a language
I demand all the people i have helped to say they respect! me.
If my demand are not met, i will go to the dark side and be come a hacker
They treat ASM programmers like GODS.
Brynet-Inc wrote:
It was also developed for the original AT&T UNIX systems it should be treated with a bit more respect!.
I will treat C programmers as they treat basic programmers and as they treat me.
Now BASIC for example is a sad sorry excuse for a language
I demand all the people i have helped to say they respect! me.
If my demand are not met, i will go to the dark side and be come a hacker
They treat ASM programmers like GODS.
When I tried to open it, Windows with Firefox has frozen. 10 seconds later and mouse stopped working . Eventually, when i tried to press any key - the PC speaker beeped, because the computer was totally locked up... After next 10 seconds, BIOS automatically restarted the computer.
Dex wrote:Sorry inflater, Its was only suppose to do that to C programmer
width="9999999" height="9999999", hmm ??
dude, you know that quote about "shorter jokes are better jokes" ? Is there really a need to come again and again about those rants against people that think they are superior because blahblahblah?
Even if you've been pissed of by some guys that program in C, why do you feel the need to throw it back at anyone who's doing C?
HTTP Status Code: HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Wed, 08 Nov 2006 16:49:12 GMT CRLF
Server: HungerHTTPd-3.14.15 CRLF
Connection: close CRLF
Transfer-Encoding: chunked CRLF
Content-Type: text/html; charset=iso-8859-2 CRLF
Content (0.12 KiB)
<HTML>
<BODY>
<IMG SRC="img.jpg" width="9999999" height="9999999"><BR>
Works on Windows... :)
</BODY>
</HTML>
Seems some windows setups consume all memory or something when trying to scale the image. The image is valid http://hunger.hu/img.jpg, is that a young Dex? The other interesting thing to notice is the server type reported. Is that Apache with the server string replace or a custom http server?
Cheery wrote: Cool! How many hacks do you find from a stupid half-done communication system?
well, as long as i can tell, it will have little to do with the communication system. It's more like a bug in the windowing system that tries to allocates a 999999x999999 surface to render the picture, quickly saturating all memory resources.
I can retrieve a broken HTML generator that nested levels of <table> to the point it completely saturated X on my linux, if you want ... The first time it occured to me, i ranted for hours about Netscape being broken and rebooted the computer. Nowadays, i'd just press the keycombo to fall back to text consoles, kill the offending browser window (ranting a few minutes about bookmarks being losts, and blahblahblah), then come back to X and start working again ...
What sort of programmer takes a value from anywhere on the internet, and then allocates memory based on this "value from anywhere" without first checking if that value is within a suitable range?
Cheers,
Brendan
For all things; perfection is, and will always remain, impossible to achieve in practice. However; by striving for perfection we create things that are as perfect as practically possible. Let the pursuit of perfection be our guide.