A decade later, she’d tell interns: “ LDS loads a pointer and destroys your data segment. Respect it. Then avoid it.”
And somewhere in a museum, a 386 motherboard smiled, its LDS instruction still perfectly capable of crashing any program that dared to wake it. x86 lds
That night, Eleanor poured a whiskey and thought about LDS . Born in 1978 with the 8086, mature in the 286’s protected mode, and already a zombie on the 386—kept alive only by backward compatibility. It was the programming equivalent of a rotary phone in a smartphone world. You could still use it. But you really, really shouldn’t. A decade later, she’d tell interns: “ LDS
The disassembly pointed to one instruction: LDS . A decade later