Top 5 World’s Most Difficult Programming Languages

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1.Malbolge Malbolge is one of the toughest programming languages. As a matter of fact, after its arrival, it took 2 years for writing first Malbolge program, just imagine now how difficult it is? It is said to be that the author of Malbolge programming language has never written a single program. It is public domain esoteric programming language created by Ben Olmsted in 1998. Hello world program in Malbolge (=<`#9]~6ZY32Vx/4Rs+0No-&Jk)”Fh}|Bcy?`=*z]Kw%oG4UUS0/@-ejc(:’8dc 2.Cow programming language Cow programming language is released sometime in early 2013. It was designed with the bovine in the mind. Cows posses limited vocabulary skills, so the developers inherit the words known by them. The instructions language consists different variations of ‘moo’ that is, moO, MoO, mOo, mOO, Moo, and so on. It is a case-sensitive language and the other words & symbols in between the instructions of the language are ignored. Hello world program in Cow prog...

This USB Stick Will Instantly Destroy Your Computer



For just a few bucks, you can pick up a USB stick that destroys almost anything that it’s plugged into. Laptops, PCs, televisions, photo booths — you name it.
Once a proof-of-concept, the pocket-sized USB stick now fits in any security tester’s repertoire of tools and hacks, says the Hong Kong-based company that developed it. It works like this: when the USB Kill stick is plugged in, it rapidly charges its capacitors from the USB power supply, and then discharges — all in the matter of seconds.
On unprotected equipment, the device’s makers say it will “instantly and permanently disable unprotected hardware”.
You might be forgiven for thinking, “Well, why exactly?”

The lesson here is simple enough. If a device has an exposed USB port — such as a copy machine or even an airline entertainment system — it can be used and abused, not just by a hacker or malicious actor, but also electrical attacks.
“Any public facing USB port should be considered an attack vector,” says the company. “In data security, these ports are often locked down to prevent exfiltration of data, or infiltration of malware, but are very often unprotected against electrical attack.”
Not every device is vulnerable to a USB Kill attack. The device maker said that Apple “voluntarily” protected its hardware.

USB Kill costs €49.95 (about $56), and a Test Shield, which allows users to test for an attack without blowing up their hardware, costs an additional €13.95 (about $16).

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