You know how to tell that it wasn't?
It's using careful hedging language — "could be used to attempt", "have the potential to", "more effective".
AI would just plow through that shit, hallucinating facts like there is no tomorrow.
You know how to tell that it wasn't?
It's using careful hedging language — "could be used to attempt", "have the potential to", "more effective".
AI would just plow through that shit, hallucinating facts like there is no tomorrow.
This is nonsense. Passwords might have an interesting distribution, key space is flat. There is nothing to learn.
And I hope you didn't mean letting an LLM loose on, say, the AES circuit, and expecting it will figure something out.
encryption
You can train AI to crack encryption
Oh do provide details.
It's bluca, yo.
As a random example, here is bluca breaking suspend-then-hibernate
, then being a complete asshole about it, while other systemd devs are trying to put the fire out. Do read his code reviews on the latter. yuwata and keszybz have nerves of steel.
The current behaviour is fully expected and documented
bluca is cancer.
Is it some kind of historical elective course
No, there was a poster showing correspondence with Latin on the wall, somewhere. The symbols are almost 1-1 with modern orthography, so it takes only about a week of practice. And I was really bored.
never seen Glagolic in the wild
It's about as distant from modern use as runes are for germanic speakers, but maybe with different connotations. Decorative nonsense.
But I did submit essays written with that when I wanted to fail with style. :)
I also met a guy in college who used it to keep notes. That guy was also bored.
It was widespread in Croatia until the late middle ages, about XIV-XV century.
Noone knows how to read it, apart from some linguists and overzealous Witcher fans.
I could fluently read and write it in high school. Was bored.
Yo, setup hibernation and use hybrid sleep as your default sleep.
ln -s /etc/systemd/system/suspend.target ../../../usr/lib/systemd/system/suspend-then-hibernate.target
Now any sleep is hybrid. The machine suspends, then wakes up after a timeout, and enters hibernation. The timeout is configurable in systemd-sleep.conf(5)
.
With this combo I find that I prefer S0 to S3. S0 drains the battery about twice as fast, sure, but it resumes instantaneously, while S3 takes about 30 seconds (!) to resume on this machine. And the thing hibernates and powers off if I leave it for an hour anyway.
I have a fist-gen Framework 13 (Intel 11). If I want to upgrade to fully match the new gear, what needs upgrading..?
Off the top of my head:
I should probably get a new keyboard as well, as I'm one of the people with the DEL key randomly going dead.
I already replaced:
I can hold on to the £10 wireless card, the PCIe3 SSD that I bought after WD just died one day, and the compressed alufoil that is the main body.
Well fuck me.
Ahhh ye olde "We'll sabotage the ultra-right by putting them in power!"
This political gambit is an excellent choice for fucks and giggles.