Hi
I am running Lion with latest patches
> uname -a
Darwin wger.local 11.2.0 Darwin Kernel Version 11.2.0: Tue Aug 9 20:54:00 PDT 2011; root:xnu-1699.24.8~1/RELEASE_X86_64 x86_64
Installed mplayer, ffmpeg, gnu-getopt and ImageMagick through brew.
I am unable to generate Video Contact... (0 Replies)
Hi.
I've been very busy this month working on resurrecting my old projects related to "cyberspace situational awareness" (CSA) which began last month by surveying the downstream literature that referenced my papers in this area using Google Scholar and also ResearchGate and posting updates on my... (5 Replies)
Please message me or post in this thread if anyone is interested in contributing some C, C++, or C# code for this project. Right now we have an open source C++ git project (created by someone else a few years ago) that fails when we try to compile on Ubuntu. I need someone to fix the make... (4 Replies)
Richard Zuech annotates his first experience flying in virtualized cyberspace hunting the bad guys!
... and he finds some!
Application for Virtualizing CyberSpace like Outer Space for Cyberspace Situational Awareness (0 Replies)
FYI.
On ResearchGate: Researchers render cyberspace like a 3D video game to make identifying threats easier
24th July 2017 by Katherine Lindemann
Cybersecurity analysts may soon be able to travel through cyberspace like outer space and see attacks with the naked eye.
On ResearchGate:... (3 Replies)
What do you think?
Read this: Virtualized Cyberspace, Cyberspace Consciousness and Simulation Theory
and comment below....
Are we in a computer simulation? Yes or No?
Thanks! (0 Replies)
You are seeing this new video here first!
Top Five Cybersecurity Threats | Earth Year 2019 | You Have Been Warned!
https://youtu.be/dRE4u9QVsSg
PS: That video has two small typos, but nothing serious. Heck it took nearly 1.5 hours to render even on a 12-core Mac Pro with 64GB of... (20 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
20 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
nano-tiny
NANO-TINY(1) General Commands Manual NANO-TINY(1)NAME
nano-tiny - Nano's ANOther editor, an enhanced free Pico Clone
SYNOPSIS
nano-tiny [options] [+LINE] file
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the nano-tiny command.
nano is a small, free and friendly editor which aims to replace Pico, the default editor included in the non-free Pine package. Rather than
just copying Pico's look and feel, nano also implements some missing (or disabled by default) features in Pico, such as "search and
replace" and "goto line number".
nano-tiny is a special, minimal build of the program, aimed for Debian's boot-floppies or emergency disks.
OPTIONS -V (--version)
Show the current version number and author.
-h (--help)
Display a summary of command line options.
See the nano(1) manpage for the complete documentation of nano.
BUGS
Please send any comments or bug reports to
nano@nano-editor.org.
The nano mailing list is available from
nano-devel@lists.sourceforge.net. To subscribe, email to nano-devel-request@lists.sourceforge.net with a subject of "subscribe".
HOMEPAGE
http://www.nano-editor.org/
AUTHOR
Chris Allegretta <chrisa@asty.org>, et al (see AUTHORS for details). This manual page was originally written by Jordi Mallach <jordi@sin-
dominio.net>, for the Debian system (but may be used by others).
February 20, 2002 NANO-TINY(1)