Havoc in a sentence as a noun

Or a "file system from ****" that wreaks havoc with your file I/O.

Their software can detect most of the DNS problems you can get yourself into that wreak havoc with mail.

If unleashed, this bug could've been used to wreak havoc on Facebook and damage the company's reputation.

We have Anonymous who generally wreaks havoc on whomever pokes that hornets nest.

We'd have months-long trolling sessions where we would get ourselves promoted to wiseguys, then wreak havoc on the site in whatever manner struck our fancy.

Wreak havoc by setting up terror groups using names that are confusingly similar to important organizations.

The rest of the current crop are nothing more than brainwashed amateurs who spend their time wreaking havoc and misery in isolated parts of the world that no normal person would ever have occasion to set foot in.

I have been bitten twice by such schemes, although having a legit copy:- In Settlers 3, buildings started to produce wrong items: iron instead of pigs etc. In a game that heavily relies on well crafted production chains, it completely wrecks havoc.

As an example of something completely removed from quality of personnel, the time difference can wreak havoc on its own, especially when the stakeholders and developers are in different hemispheres.

" Usernames and e-mail addresses were also released; people were exhorted to "use and abuse these password lists and credit card information to wreak unholy havoc upon the systems and personal e-mail accounts of these rich and powerful oppressors.

" How is building something quickly or testing the boundaries of what can be done, a means of protest, and how does that wreak havoc on Fortune 500 companies?And I found this pretty insulting too, "Wall Street probably wont mind all the idealism as long as it doesnt get in the way of the stock price -- provided Anonymous isn't a featured speaker at the next shareholders meeting.

Havoc definitions

noun

violent and needless disturbance

See also: mayhem