yeays, just another place that will log my fingerprint... lets see people getting access to my personal information that I might not want hrmm, that must be good.
I never liked the idea of even the government having my fingerprints on file, so I always opted out of it during the 'class' field trip to see what the government office was like.
I like the idea of heat patterns for this instead because that doesn't leave a trace that someone can duplicate unless they have a thermal monitor and something to replicate it.
lets say java goes crazy and in theory goes nuts like you say.
and you try this
ps -A | grep java
kill #
and oh wait the process doesn't stop then
kill -s 9 #
if that still doesn't work, you can even send the proccess a signal making it think the computer is rebooting.
I have not once needed to reboot because of a runaway process with linux, windows? yes of course, but not linux
think this is a horrible idea?
Covert it from the out put via capture to digital back to analog, just a couple conversions too many imo.
All electronic, don't even have myself type it, H&R block or something like that makes it easy mode.
yeays, just another place that will log my fingerprint ... lets see people getting access to my personal information that I might not want hrmm, that must be good.
I never liked the idea of even the government having my fingerprints on file, so I always opted out of it during the 'class' field trip to see what the government office was like.
I like the idea of heat patterns for this instead because that doesn't leave a trace that someone can duplicate unless they have a thermal monitor and something to replicate it.
lets say java goes crazy and in theory goes nuts like you say. and you try this ps -A | grep java kill # and oh wait the process doesn't stop then kill -s 9 # if that still doesn't work, you can even send the proccess a signal making it think the computer is rebooting. I have not once needed to reboot because of a runaway process with linux, windows? yes of course, but not linux
"touch" the power button to turn it back on after it crashes.
Now if I could only find my superscope from 6th grade