Hi Katie, For me, OSS means Open Source Software. Rob
Aug. 23, 2022 8:12:24 p.m. Katherine Mcmillan <kmcmi...@uottawa.ca>: > Hi Rob, > > This is great brainstorming! > > "Behind every non-Linux OS, there is a secret OSS lining. > Has OSS taken over?" > > Is this question referring to OSes for all devices? > > When you use "OSS", for clarity, are you referring to "Operating System > Scripting" or "Open Source Software"? I can read that acronym as either in > this context. > > I really like the idea of exploring/sharing auditing tools! > > Sincerely, > Katie > ---------------------------------------- > *From:* r...@echlin.ca <r...@echlin.ca> > *Sent:* 16 August 2022 20:56 > *To:* linux-Ottawa <linux@linux-ottawa.org> > *Subject:* [linux] Linux laptops are an out of the box phenomenon > > *Attention : courriel externe | external email* > > Hi all, > > Here are a few questions to consider. > > And by consider, I mean, find more and better questions. > > Answers can come as presentations at question-based meetings. > > > Linux is all over the modern web. Containers, VMs, clouds, phones, TVs, all > the edge devices. > What are the most important Linux things to learn to excel in the modern web? > (Linus' phone number is not a correct answer) > > Linux and Unix and BSD - haha. > Behind every non-Linux OS, there is a secret OSS lining. > Has OSS taken over? > > All the insecure bits and bobs that are included in the Web of OSS languages > are exposing us to risk. > Can we fix that? Can we analyze some types of error out of the code with > Static Analysis? > I am loving ShellCheck. > What OSS Static Analysis tools are helping you to code safer? > > I am looking forward to your questions! > > All my very best, > Rob > >