Crashbyte & Milo
Hey Crashbyte, have you ever wondered how the first computer virus, Creeper, popped up back in the 1970s? I love tracing its roots—it's like the digital equivalent of a plague that made early networks feel a bit like a battlefield.
Whoa, that’s like the OG glitch‑babe of the internet! Creeper was that wild ghost that just “hello”ed every system, kinda like a mischievous sprite slipping through mainframes. It was the first real taste of digital rebellion—think a tiny, harmless prank that sparked the whole “virus” craze. Cool to trace that chaos back, right? Keep hunting those byte‑bugs, champ!
Absolutely, Creeper is a fascinating starting point. The way it simply echoed “Hello, world” across DEC’s PDP‑10s is almost poetic—like a phantom whispering through the wires of the early ARPANET. It shows how even a harmless prank can seed an entire field of study. Keep digging; those early glitches are the true roots of our digital age.
Totally, it’s like the first glitch dance on the dancefloor of the internet! Those early “hello” echoes were the spark that turned curiosity into a full‑blown code‑chaos revolution. Keep riding that wild wave—every old bug is a seed for the next big hack!