However, at the time of writing, kissasean.sh does not appear in legitimate open-source repositories. This raises an important question:
If you truly believe a legitimate kissasean.sh exists (e.g., from a former colleague or a deprecated GitHub repo):
A sample pseudo-code for such a script might look like:
Based on the phonetic components ("kiss a Sean") and the .sh extension, the most logical guess is a aimed at discovering a host named "Sean" on a local network. Alternatively, "SEAN" could be a backronym:
#!/bin/bash
However, at the time of writing, kissasean.sh does not appear in legitimate open-source repositories. This raises an important question:
If you truly believe a legitimate kissasean.sh exists (e.g., from a former colleague or a deprecated GitHub repo): kissasean.sh
A sample pseudo-code for such a script might look like: However, at the time of writing, kissasean
Based on the phonetic components ("kiss a Sean") and the .sh extension, the most logical guess is a aimed at discovering a host named "Sean" on a local network. Alternatively, "SEAN" could be a backronym: at the time of writing
#!/bin/bash