Very low cost, low component count charger/adapter – replaces linear transformer based solutions
• extremely simple circuit configuration designed for high volume, low cost manufacturing
Very low cost, low component count charger/adapter – replaces linear transformer based solutions
• extremely simple circuit configuration designed for high volume, low cost manufacturing
Netcat for NT is the tcp/ip "Swiss Army knife" that never made it into any
of the resource kits. It has proved to be an extremely versatile tool on
the unix platform. So why should NT always be unix s poor cousin when it
comes to tcp/ip testing and exploration? I bet many NT admins out there
keep a unix box around to use tools such as Netcat or to test their systems
with the unix version of an NT vulnerability exploit. With Netcat for NT
part of that feeling disempowerment is over.
FERRET - a broadcast analysis tool
This tool is designed to demonstrate the problem of "data seapage".
The average machine broadcasts a lot of information about itself
on open networks. This tool captures and organizes this information.
This code is extremely low quality, hacked together in order to
demonstrate the problem at the BlackHat Federal 2007 conference.
Higher quality code should be available around May 2007 on our
website at http://www.erratasec.com.
These documents are all classic documents relating to the domain of virus writing.Give a good insight about the virus which are rare and are considered best for case studies..many variants are still being produced and all these are original.Its very hard to find them now adays..these are extremely helpfull for people working in Malware analysis and malicious code analysis
This book has existed (in one form or another) since the first edition of C# and the .NET Platform
was published in conjunction with the release of .NET 1.0 Beta 2, circa the summer of 2001. Since
that point, I have been extremely happy and grateful to see that this text was very well received by
the press and, most important, by readers. Over the years it was nominated as a Jolt Award finalist
(I lost . . . crap!) and for the 2003 Referenceware Excellence Award in the programming book category
Indian urbanization is a complex puzzle which is extremely difficult to comprehend.
Yet, as academicians, it is our responsibility to study, comprehend, analyse, assimi-
late, and express on salient happenings in our urban systems. The expressions aim
at the larger sections of the society to disseminate technical evaluation in a compre-
hensible note. This edition focuses on awaking the society on the contextual reality
of urban India and also enabling policymakers with the situational understanding of
Indian cities.
The idea for this book was born during one of my project-related trips to the beautiful city
of Hangzhou in China, where in the role of Chief Architect I had to guide a team of very
young, very smart and extremely dedicated software developers and verification engineers.
Soon it became clear that as eager as the team was to jump into the coding, it did not have
any experience in system architecture and design and if I did not want to spend all my time in
constant travel between San Francisco and Hangzhou, the only option was to groom a number
of local junior architects. Logically, one of the first questions being asked by these carefully
selected future architects was whether I could recommend a book or other learning material
that could speed up the learning cycle. I could not. Of course, there were many books on
various related topics, but many of them were too old and most of the updated information
was either somewhere on the Internet dispersed between many sites and online magazines, or
buried in my brain along with many years of experience of system architecture.
In this book we focus on the basic signal processing that underlies current and
future ultra wideband systems. By looking at signal processing in this way we
hope this text will be useful even as UWB applications mature and change or
regulations regarding ultra wideband systems are modified. The current UWB
field is extremely dynamic, with new techniques and ideas being presented at every
communications and signal-processing conference. The basic signal-processing
techniques presented in this text though will not change for some time to come.
Thus, we have taken a somewhat theoretical approach, which we believe is longer
lasting and more useful to the reader in the long term than an up-to-the-minute
summary that is out of date as soon as it is published.