As I said, it's antiquated and hostile to newcomers, so ultimately it isn't that good an interface. When things go wrong with your computer, you're better able to reach into it's guts, hear the hum of it's engine, and figure out what's wrong. Bash is a pretty reasonably metaphor for computation. I think the terminal is an antiqutated interface that needs to be modernized, but there's a good reason it's still used. This creates brittle interfaces that are difficult to learn and troubleshoot because I think things like desktops and video games as admin tools* are poor user interfaces because they present poor metaphors for how work is done or how concepts are arranged, instead of good metaphors for computation. I think good interfaces wrap these intricacies in powerful metaphors that build a bridge between the human and the computer, and that it is right and proper that the human meets the computer more than halfway.
I even implemented mating and light genetic traits that can be passed down You could see its stats in the ".virus" file. And otherwise randomly leave ".poop" files around you'd have to clean up to make virus stay healthy.
#Minecraft ddos attack tool full
If too full it would lave ".puke" files with some of the strings from the food file. Virus would only represent itself as a file called for example Toby.virus and it would wander around in folders (only 2 levels deep) and you could give him ascii files with a ".food" extension that includes strings and depending on the size of the file the virus would get full. That's awesome! Reminds me of a little virtual tamagochi I programmed in college called Virus. If the players ship is destroyed, the application itself is deleted." If the player kills the alien, the file it is based on is deleted. Each alien in the game is created based on a random file on the players computer. "Lose/Lose is a video-game with real life consequences.