Votes utiles reçus relativement à des chroniques et des listes:
100% (23 sur 23)
Surnom : jherr
Emplacement: Silicon Valley, CA
Anniversaire de naissance: Juil 18 (Saved Remind mePlease RetryPlease Retry)
Anniversaire: Jui 13
Dans mes propres mots:
You can keep up with Jack's work and his writing at http://jackherrington.com. Jack Herrington is an engineer, author and presenter who lives and works in the Bay Area. His mission is to expose his fellow engineers to new technologies. That covers a broad spectrum, from demonstrating programs that write other programs in the book Code Generation in Action. Providing techniques for building custom… Lire la suite You can keep up with Jack's work and his writing at http://jackherrington.com.
Jack Herrington is an engineer, author and presenter who lives and works in the Bay Area. His mission is to expose his fellow engineers to new technologies. That covers a broad spectrum, from demonstrating programs that write other programs in the book Code Generation in Action. Providing techniques for building customer centered web sites in PHP Hacks. All the way writing a how-to on audio blogging called Podcasting Hacks. All of which make great holiday gifts and are available online here, and at your local bookstore. Jack also writes articles for O’Reilly, DevX and IBM Developerworks.
Jack lives with his wife, daughter and two adopted dogs. When he is not writing software, books or articles you can find him on his bike, running or in the pool training for triathlons.
|
|
Évaluations
Classement de l'évaluateur: 29,623 - Total des votes utiles : 23 sur 23
|
If you think about the software development world as architects and engineers. Where architects take a very high level view of the world and don't get into fine grained implementation details. Then if you consider yourself this kind of architect, you will get a lot out of this book. Though the book is fairly long (~500 pages) the depth of the content is still at the 'field guide' level. This means that the book focuses more on understanding the components of SOA at a holistic level without getting too deep into implementation details. The first chapter of the book does delve into the basics of the XML core technologies (XML, XML validation, XSL, etc.). After that the book stays at the… Lire la suite
|
|
|
This is a fascinating read about how understanding hacking, from gathering the data, to the forensic analysis. The second part, on the forensic analysis is very detailed and well written. The root idea is very simple, put an attractive target on the Internet, wait until it's hacked (and it will be), and then analyze the attack. The first part of the book covers the construction of these attractive 'honeypots'. The second part covers how to analyze the inevitable attack. The third part, which is the most high level, is about the culture of hacking and hackers. I would recommend this book to anyone involved in securing systems on the open internet who has a good understanding of the… Lire la suite
|
|
|
This is not a book for the technically feint of heart. It starts out with almost no introduction at all into mapping target networks with nmap and never stops for a breath. There is a reasonable amount of explanation, but the heart of the book is in demonstrating hacking techniques at the system and command line level. Graphics are used well to smooth over some of the more difficult topics, which is why I gave the book four stars. The majority of the book, the first four parts, is dedicated to a command level explanation of various types of exploits, largely in the Unix environment. The last part of the book covers the social and legal aspects of hacking and the security response to… Lire la suite
|
|