Some bright spark noticed that if you sent a CTCP ping to a user through IRC containing "+++ ATH", their client would echo that back and, more
often than not, it would hang up their modem.
Some bright spark noticed that if you sent a CTCP ping to a user through IRC containing "+++ ATH", their client would echo that back and, more often than not, it would hang up their modem.
I recall this hack. One simple "hack" that we did on the DOS machines in our high school computer lab was use unbreakable space characters in file names. This made the file "invisible" in the directory listing. We used Alt+255 to enter this character at the command prompt.
This reminds me of a silly computer lab hack that I'm proud to have come up with myself back in the day :P
We had computers with Windows 95, IIRC. They were all on a LAN. The filesystem naturally wouldn't let us run command.com or anything, but the web browser (Netscape Navigator) let us put in the telnet application manually. I pointed to command.com. Then, from your browser, just type "telnet://" and instant command prompt :P
We played a lot of LAN DOOM back
then while the teacher was in the front of the class and couldn't see our screens.
I recall this hack. One simple "hack" that we did on the DOS machines in our high school computer lab was use unbreakable space characters in file names. This made the file "invisible" in the directory listing. We used Alt+255 to enter this character at the command prompt.
we just used to ping flood clients eventually the
server would disconnect them.
This reminds me of a silly computer lab hack that I'm proud to have com with myself back in the day :P
The mention of computer lab reminds me of a story. This wasn't a hack or anything, but one day a classmate asked me how to spell banana... while he's at the login screen. So, derp.. next time I'm in there I log in as him with that password, and it works. I decided to play a trick on him
and rename Paint to Write and Write to Calculator, things like that. He was pretty confused when he finally logged in and had to ask the lab person for help. They were also confused :). "I'm clicking on Write but it's opening Paint." They didn't pay attention to the icons.
I decided to play a trick on him and rename Paint to Write and Write
to Calculator, things like that. He
This reminds me of a silly computer lab hack that I'm proud to have co with myself back in the day :P
The mention of computer lab reminds me of a story. This wasn't a hack or
This made the file "invisible" in the directory listing. We used
Alt+255 to enter this character at the command prompt.
I've never heard of that one before - did any file with that character
in it turn invisible? How do you turn them back visible if you don't
know the names?
dir >lis.txt- d 100
debug lis.txt
No, that character displays as a space.
I'm sure there's some real nuisance value possible by adding one of
those to an innocent looking file name, e.g. CONFIG[0xFF].SYS so that
it looked like the file was there in a DIR listing but you would get a "file not found" any time you tried to view or manipulate it...
Quality use of DEBUG there, by the way :)
No, that character displays as a space.
Ben Collver wrote to Bob Worm <=-
I listened to a podcast by Jason Scott where he mentioned clever little hacks and documents such as the anarchists cookbook. He explained that teens of that era did not want to actually construct bombs. They lived perhaps in oppressive environments and wanted to feel empowered. These documents and hacks felt empowering in a way.
No, that character displays as a space.
The old Apple DOS3.x so there was 3.2 3.2.1, and 3.3 would all allow you to use any ctl characters as filenames. You could use a name like hello and then pop in 5 x ctl-j and the name would actually disappear from the catalog. There were a number of variations on this, different control characters also having cursor control.
Steve Bourne used to keep a directory of zero-byte files that
were given names according to each representable 8-bit byte in
his account at Bell Labs. This apparently was famous for
tripping up various naive scripts and tools that walked across
the filesystem.
I always thought that was a clever hack.
Steve Bourne used to keep a directory of zero-byte files that
were given names according to each representable 8-bit byte in
his account at Bell Labs. This apparently was famous for
tripping up various naive scripts and tools that walked across
the filesystem
Steve Bourne used to keep a directory of zero-byte files that
were given names according to each representable 8-bit byte in
his account at Bell Labs. This apparently was famous for
tripping up various naive scripts and tools that walked across
the filesystem
Ya mean the Linux guy?
Fun fact: Bourne came from the UK, where he'd worked in Algol-68.
He wrote pre-processor macros that made the dialect of C he wrote
`sh` in look somewhat like Algol; this, and the version of
`finger.c` from 4.2BSD, became the inspirations for the International Obfuscated C-Code Contest. The syntax consumed by `sh` is somewhat reminiscent of Algol, as well.
I don't remember the details, but we used to change people's color theme
to Hotdog Stand it Win 3.1
and then deleted the control panel....
to Hotdog Stand it Win 3.1
That brings back memories... Perhaps not beautiful in the literal sense but a lovely mixture of harmless yet annoying.
Given Win3.x was like a second though over the top of DOS not many files had any sort of protection. Used to be a thing for the misguided youth to vandalise demo systems at PC shows here....
Must've been about 95-6 I was working in a call centre with a Win NT network. We had a, what I'd call non team member.. I managed to replace the network login splash image with one captured from a Monty Python game of the time which had a boss key they took you to a pretend website "Goat Love".
I'm not familiar with that one - the "Goat Love" part, anyway. I shall Google it with caution!
Must've been about 95-6 I was working in a call centre with a Win NT network. We had a, what I'd call non team member.. I managed to replace the network login splash image with one captured from a Monty Python game of the time which had a boss key they took you to a pretend website "Goat Love".
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