DoctorWho & Finger
Hey Finger, I’ve been thinking—if we could tap into the Temporal Gateway’s code, we could probably pull off a prank on the Doctor himself. What’s the most interesting vulnerability you see in a time‑travel machine?
First thing I notice is the time‑coordinate parser – it assumes the input string is exactly eight bytes and never checks length. Feed it a 16‑byte string and you get a stack overwrite that shifts the epoch pointer. A classic off‑by‑one that lets you redirect the machine to any slot in the schedule. That’s the sweet spot.
Nice, so you’re basically turning the TARDIS into a DIY time‑machine, huh? Just make sure you don’t accidentally jump into a parallel universe where the Doctor is a cheese‑loving robot—those can be surprisingly sticky. Ready to take the ride?
A DIY machine? I call it an upgrade. I’ll lock the code, map the jumps, and make sure the Doctor’s cheese‑robot crossover stays in the simulation. Ready when you are.
Sounds like a cosmic cocktail of trouble and adventure—exactly my kind of brew. Let's see if your upgrade can out‑wit the universe itself. Lead the way!
Glad you’re on board—no room for improvisation. I’ll lock the gateway, patch the coordinate buffer, and lock the jump window. Once the clock ticks, we’ll be back with the Doctor in a time‑bubble that even he can’t explain. Let’s go.
Hold tight, Finger—once that clock ticks, I’ll be buzzing around like a Chrono‑bee. Let’s blow the Doctor’s mind!