>as we saw with Heartbleed, the "many eyes" theory is flawed as well. I don't think Heartbleed counts as some sort of evidence against the "many eyes" paradigm. There are so many better bugs for that, as Heartbleed is…
I suspect that the author of this post simply paraphrased Hal Abelson's introductory lecture to MIT's "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs" class. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XYKRVNQ_MqE
I'm interested in the games he listed as well. I know the first one (robot prospector) is probably SteamWorld Dig. Not certain about the others.
I believe there's a lot of worry about systemd because what Pottering is doing is relatively new. To grossly oversimplify; the ecosystem of inits among Linux distros looked something like "sysvinit -or- spin your own."…
Ah yes, ssh tunneling. The high school IT initiate's go-to method to dodge the web filter. It really can be an elegant solution when you don't have the patience to rev up OpenVPN for real.
>as we saw with Heartbleed, the "many eyes" theory is flawed as well. I don't think Heartbleed counts as some sort of evidence against the "many eyes" paradigm. There are so many better bugs for that, as Heartbleed is…
I suspect that the author of this post simply paraphrased Hal Abelson's introductory lecture to MIT's "Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs" class. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XYKRVNQ_MqE
I'm interested in the games he listed as well. I know the first one (robot prospector) is probably SteamWorld Dig. Not certain about the others.
I believe there's a lot of worry about systemd because what Pottering is doing is relatively new. To grossly oversimplify; the ecosystem of inits among Linux distros looked something like "sysvinit -or- spin your own."…
Ah yes, ssh tunneling. The high school IT initiate's go-to method to dodge the web filter. It really can be an elegant solution when you don't have the patience to rev up OpenVPN for real.