gatheringofgray.com— A good C tutorial that will teach you how to read most of the exploits you can find on line or create your own. Also some assembler is taught which is useful too.
Oct 22, 2005View in Crawl 4
"If you seriously haven't written a "hello world" in C, and need a website to tell you what hexadecimal, CPU registers, and memory pointers are, then you can't even call yourself a programmer let alone a "HACKAR!!@#LOlZ"Go to the library and start reading.. head for the stacks with call numbers around 001-005. In about 5 or 10 years, you might be able to hack something."So reading what those things are in a book from the library means you are smart and a good programmer and reading it off the internet makes you dumb? I suppose you knew what these things were from the beginning and were never taught by anyone or read about these things anywhere, you just kew it.
This is old. So old, in fact, that I learnt off this.Please, if you find summat on the 'net that you like, you don't have to digg it. That's what del.icio.us is for *rolls eyes*
I wrote this as a basic introduction to programming. The title was chosen on purpose, to attract some folks who may not have been interested in reading 'another C tutorial'. It was purposefully made to attract (convert?) skiddies.Thanks for the feedback on it.
This, you diggiots, is exactly the type of links that make up the mentality of the mean population of Digg.Teenage script kiddies who can't spell, who spell "your" with "ur", and have learned that exclamation points come in bundles of three. (OMGLOL!!!).That said, it's rather unfortunate - as the short PDFs are certainly well-written (if ill-intending a particular audience). Would be nice to see more people invest time in some of the lower-level programming languagea and stop hovering around the script-world which is abstracted away by many layers from the real fun of programming.
adamcoOct 23, 2005
"If you seriously haven't written a "hello world" in C, and need a website to tell you what hexadecimal, CPU registers, and memory pointers are, then you can't even call yourself a programmer let alone a "HACKAR!!@#LOlZ"Go to the library and start reading.. head for the stacks with call numbers around 001-005. In about 5 or 10 years, you might be able to hack something."So reading what those things are in a book from the library means you are smart and a good programmer and reading it off the internet makes you dumb? I suppose you knew what these things were from the beginning and were never taught by anyone or read about these things anywhere, you just kew it.
greatdevourerOct 23, 2005
This is old. So old, in fact, that I learnt off this.Please, if you find summat on the 'net that you like, you don't have to digg it. That's what del.icio.us is for *rolls eyes*
veritechOct 23, 2005
l33t
lovepumpOct 23, 2005
I wrote this as a basic introduction to programming. The title was chosen on purpose, to attract some folks who may not have been interested in reading 'another C tutorial'. It was purposefully made to attract (convert?) skiddies.Thanks for the feedback on it.
zoobsterOct 23, 2005
This, you diggiots, is exactly the type of links that make up the mentality of the mean population of Digg.Teenage script kiddies who can't spell, who spell "your" with "ur", and have learned that exclamation points come in bundles of three. (OMGLOL!!!).That said, it's rather unfortunate - as the short PDFs are certainly well-written (if ill-intending a particular audience). Would be nice to see more people invest time in some of the lower-level programming languagea and stop hovering around the script-world which is abstracted away by many layers from the real fun of programming.
erkokiteOct 23, 2005
Very informative. Dugg.
bachmannjrJun 8, 2006
non of you r hackers a real hacker is hacking from dos or Ubuntu...