Biggest things I'm seeing is CVE-2023-21709 for Exchange requires a PowerShell script to be run after patching. Also, CVE-2023-29328/29330 for Teams affect all devices (Windows, Mac, iOS, and Android).
I love WinGet but I just wish there was support for Windows Server, without having to do a bunch of hacks
Edited to Add: I noticed this community is Powershell, here the powershell version of above:
Nice! You are a person of many talents
Documentation is top notch too.
Nothing will make me love a solution more than it being well documented. Sounds simple, but saves so much time.
The book I wrote. When I first talked with the publisher he asked, "what skills would you look for in someone who wants to do your job?" And that's the premise I stuck with writing it.
Very close to VB. Glad I noticed it didn't have End If
and End Function
before I guessed.
I feel down a rabbit hole, a few years ago wonder the same thing about C#. Here is what I found.
- C# was developed in 2000 as a successor to C++. Doubling the ++ to a #.
- C++ was developed in the early 80s as a successor to C. Adding plus (+) to a name was a common way of indicating it was an enhancement. Also ++ is the incrementing operator for C.
- C was developed in the early 70s as a successor to the B programming language. C comes after B.
- B was developed in 1969 and was derived from the BCPL language. Basically, B was a stripped down version of BCPL.
- BCPL (Basic Combined Programming Language) was developed in 1967 and was a designed as an simpler version of CPL.
- CPL (Combined Programming Language) was developed in the early 60s at Cambridge. The original name was "Cambridge Programming Language" but was changed to Combined when it was published jointly with the University of London.
Interesting. As someone who mainly deals in PowerShell, this is very similar to the Where-Object clause and could save me some headaches when I need to work in Python.
From personal experience, it seems like things outside of your normal listening don't affect too much. At least in my case, my daughter making me play the Encanto soundtrack 250,000 times hasn't affected my weekly or daily playlists.
That's pretty similar with what happened with me and the train. Kept getting random drops from a plant. I went out to investigate and everything tested perfect and the network was staying up. That was until a freight train rolled by. Turns out AT&T had run the line by shoving a piece of PVC through the gravel between two cross-ties, then running the cable through it.
I've actually had an excavator take out my network. I've also had networks taken out by forklift, train, and a semi-truck towing three other semi-trucks.
Apparently it due to an issue with Kotlin - https://github.com/code-golf/code-golf/issues/151#issuecomment-1126266250