I tried reading Oreilly's Unix Power tools, I then decided to read the man page for every command in/bin. I then wiped my Linux install with a badly formatted shred command. Now I am going to try LFS. Is it appropriate for me? Hmmmm.
there's no need to resort to profanity. But, since you started it, BSD, Last I tried it, was a bitch to install. True, it was on a laptop, from a parallel CD-ROM, With an unrecognized PCMCIA NIC, But a bitch nonetheless. Linux installed fine. Secure, who cares, it was a laptop. If I was worried about security, the entire freakin OS will be Read-Only (read KNOPPIX) same for my website (another CD-ROM) deface that!!!!
However, Who Cares!
If you truly needed a random number, you would not use a desktop computer's random number generator. you would use some digital cameras, a lavalamp or two and LavaRnd. For the rest of the world, a time seeded random is good enough.
As Well as LinuxBIOS
though I haven't had the balls to try it on my ECS K7(SiS735). perhaps one of these days.......
I tried reading Oreilly's Unix Power tools, I then decided to read the man page for every command in /bin. I then wiped my Linux install with a badly formatted shred command. Now I am going to try LFS. Is it appropriate for me? Hmmmm.
there's no need to resort to profanity. But, since you started it, BSD, Last I tried it, was a bitch to install. True, it was on a laptop, from a parallel CD-ROM, With an unrecognized PCMCIA NIC, But a bitch nonetheless. Linux installed fine. Secure, who cares, it was a laptop. If I was worried about security, the entire freakin OS will be Read-Only (read KNOPPIX) same for my website (another CD-ROM) deface that!!!!
However, Who Cares! If you truly needed a random number, you would not use a desktop computer's random number generator. you would use some digital cameras, a lavalamp or two and LavaRnd. For the rest of the world, a time seeded random is good enough.