Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
One popular aspect of the book is the apparently salacious printouts of actual hacking attempts (although confidential details, such as passwords, are blacked out). [citation needed] The first edition, the version most easily available for download, was published in 1985.
The Hacker Bible is a publication of the German hacker organization Chaos Computer Club (CCC). [ 1 ] [ 2 ] It has been published in two editions to date, 1985 and 1988. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Both were edited by Wau Holland and published on the Grüne Kraft press.
The New Hacker's Dictionary (editor; MIT Press, ISBN 0-262-68092-0) – printed version of the Jargon File with Raymond listed as the editor. The Cathedral and the Bazaar (O'Reilly; hardcover ISBN 1-56592-724-9, 1999) – includes "The Cathedral and the Bazaar", "Homesteading the Noosphere", "The Magic Cauldron" and "Revenge of the Hackers"
Hackers 'plan revenge' for police clampdown on computer crime: Extract of New Scientist article on arrest of hackers, 21 April 1990: Film. In the Realm of the Hackers, written and directed by Kevin Anderson, (Film Australia, 2002, 55 minutes). E-zines: Reprint of article Hacker Revelled In Spotlight, Court Told (The Age, 23 August 1993) in Phrack.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Help; Learn to edit; Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file
This still serves as the most famous piece of hacker literature and is frequently used to illustrate the mindset of hackers. Astronomer Clifford Stoll plays a pivotal role in tracking down hacker Markus Hess, events later covered in Stoll's 1990 book The Cuckoo's Egg. [29]
The magazine said that the book was not easy to read, but that it would expose experienced programmers to both old and new topics. [ 8 ] A review of SICP as an undergraduate textbook by Philip Wadler noted the weaknesses of the Scheme language as an introductory language for a computer science course. [ 9 ]
Hackers produce new conceptions, perceptions and sensations hacked out of raw data. Everything and anything is a code for the hacker to hack, be it "programming, language, poetic language, math, or music, curves or colourings" [4] and once hacked, they create the possibility for new things to enter the world. What they create is not necessarily ...