The sheep icon for Baaash is inspired by CDC (Cult of the Dead Cow), a legendary hacker group known for creative symbolism and pushing boundaries in security and culture. Our sheep carries that torch of rebellion, learning, and humor.
Baaash builds hands-free Linux education tools using QR-powered Bash Cards. We believe in learning by doing, scanning, and engaging with real systems through playful physical scripts.
Bash Cards resemble floppy disks: physical containers of executable code. But the history goes deeper.
Punched Tape: Early computers read programs from rolls of paper tape with holes punched to encode binary. Each tape was long, physical, and used real mechanisms to load logic into machines.
Punch Cards: Before tape, punch cards (or Hollerith cards) stored single lines of code, processed in stacks by early mainframes. Entire programs could be shuffled, carried, and loaded card by card.
Bash Cards revive this physical interface idea with modern scanning tech. Each card acts as a standalone floppy or tape segment—complete, executable, and modular.
We teach Linux, networks, and security with physical interaction. No keyboards. No friction. Just scan and learn. Our decks turn Bash into a playground, and every card is a key to deeper understanding.