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THINK(1)		    General Commands Manual		      THINK(1)

NAME
       think - you don't have to think,	the computer can think for you

SYNOPSIS
       think [ -detach ]

DESCRIPTION
       Think simulates a thinking brain.

       This  can  be  useful  if someone is not	wanting	to think at invocation
       time or if someone is needing some thinking about  something.   It  can
       also  be	helpful	if someone's brain is not working correctly at invoca-
       tion time.

       When invoked, think will	go ahead and look at all of the	 commands  and
       keystrokes  that	 a  user  has  made  during the	current	login session.
       Think will then look at what files the user has.	 From  this  and  what
       level the user is listed	at in the file /usr/lib/think, think will fig-
       ure out what the	user was trying	to do when think was invoked.

DEVICES
       The process that	think uses to help a user is greatly aided if the user
       is  wearing  a  brain interface bus (bib) device.  A bib	device is nor-
       mally worn on the head, and if being used, then think will try  to  see
       what was	going through the users	head at	the time of invocation.	 After
       think  does  this,  it  will  send electric signals to the users	brain,
       causing the user	to type	in whatever keystrokes are necessary to	accom-
       plish the task that he/she doesn't want to think	about.

OPTIONS
       -detach
	      also  known  as  "Must  mother  do  all  of  your	 thinking  for
	      you?"-mode.   This options causes	think to run in	the background
	      as a daemon that watches for users who look like they  may  need
	      assistance.  When	a user is found	to be exercising cluelessness,
	      think  will  lock	 up their keyboard and will proceed to execute
	      what seems to be the most	likely sequence	of commands  that  the
	      user had intended	to execute.  This flag may only	be used	by the
	      super-user.

FILES
       /dev/brain
	      bib device special file.

       /usr/lib/think
	      file  to	indicate  various  user	abilities.  The	format of this
	      file is a	username on each line followed by some	whitspace  and
	      then a number.  The higher the number for	a given	user, the more
	      likely  think  is	 to assume that	that user knows	what he/she is
	      doing.  Unfortunately, what think	considers a large number  will
	      vary with	usage.

BUGS
       If  a  user  is	using a	bib device and actually	lacks a	brain of their
       own, then there is a high risk that think will take over	their (non-ex-
       istent) minds.  This has	the upshot that	someone	other  than  the  user
       will have to stop the program.  (Perhaps	this is	a feature.)

       It may illegal in some areas to force users to wear bib devices.

AUTHOR
       This man	page was written by John Guthrie <guthrie@math.upenn.edu> with
       suggestions from	Kevin Whyte <kwhyte@math.upenn.edu> for	the alt.sysad-
       min.recovery man	page collection.

think version 1.0		 April 5, 1996			      THINK(1)

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<https://man.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=think&sektion=1&manpath=FreeBSD+Ports+15.0>

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