sudo usermod -l root susudio
$ su susudio
# ohh
Don’t do this, it summons an angry Phil
Way to lazy to find a source but IIRC one of the Sudo devs said this was horrible because it’s “like Sudo” but not 1:1 so people will make assumptions about it that will lead to security issues
(Usually idc about security but for Sudo…)
Like that time they made their own Powershell imitation of curl? (before deciding it was an abomination and finally including stock curl, but not removing the old Powershell commandlet because of backwards compatibility so now
curl
andcurl.exe
are two different things and you’ll want the latter)Yeah that sounds like Microsoft.
So can you run
sudo rm -rf C:
to remove the malware now?No you can’t do that with administrator in windows.
Some things, windows just won’t let you do, even as an administrator.
which is good, to be clear
no user should be able to accidentally brick their entire system just because some internet troll told them to type some magic words :P massive security flaw
The Unix Haters Handbook was so real for that rm rant.
*remove the french language pack ^^
look what they have to do to mimic a fraction of our power
That’s immediately what came to mind when I saw it
Wsl, sudo … Maybe step by step windows will turn into Linux. For sure it would be an unexpected way for Linux to conquer the desktop market
at one point, microsoft will put all of their software into a VM and ship that on a linux platform. that will do.
They essentially would just need to develop their own Wine
Hardcore Linux users would still not count it and would still wait for Linux on desktop to finally take off.
Source: Linux has 6.73% share on desktop. Except 2.25 percent points are ChromeOS, which is not FOSS enough, so Linux only has 4.48% on desktop.
If I could replace the windows ui with gnome, I’d do it.
gnomekdeftfy
There is no such thing as “FOSS enough” or “not enough FOSS” it’s either free/libre or it’s not
(and ChromeOS most definitely isn’t)
That was kinda heavy sarcasm.
huh, was not able to get that from your comment. I usually use “/s” in cases like that
sudo /s