
Driftnet [ Home page | Software ] Inspired by EtherPEG (though, not owning an Apple Macintosh, I've never actually seen it in operation), Driftnet is a program which listens to network traffic and picks out images from TCP streams it observes. Fun to run on a host which sees lots of web traffic. In an experimental enhancement, driftnet now picks out MPEG audio streams from network traffic and tries to play them. (Obviously, driftnet is an invasion of privacy of a fairly blatant sort. NTK gave me a nice write-up: (thanks, guys) >> TRACKING << sufficiently advanced technology : the gathering EtherPEG was a program that sniffed for JPEGs passing by on the AirPort networks at MacHack, and showed them on the huge screen to shame people into a) turning the 802.11 encryption on, or b) reducing amount of pr0n they download at weirdo Mac conventions. (Real pedants will note that I have corrected the grammar slightly. Driftnet is in a rather early stage of development. Enough already. What's in a name?
Seamless Virtualization « Strike: GNU/Linux, Ubuntu y otros. Si quieres tener programas de windows corriendo como “nativos” en Linux, debes tener el paquete rdesktop en la versión 1.5.0 (este va a venir incluido en Feisty Fawn 7.04) OJO: Debes haber instalado la Máquina Virtual en VMware o QEMU. * Si estás usando VMware, configuralo para “host-only networking” y acuerdate de tu ip. * Si estás usando QEMU, ejecuta este comando:qemu -m 384 -redir tcp:3389::3389 windows.img Esto hace que todas las conexion en el localhost al puerto 3389 sean direccionadas a qemu. 1.- En la MV (aka Maquina Virtual), identificate como Administrator. Inicio → Panel de Control → Propiedades del Sistema. 2.- En la MV, baja y extraelo a C:\seamlessrdp. 3.- Instala rdesktop en tu distro. Ahora prueba cualquier aplicación. rdesktop -A -s "c:\seamlessrdp\seamlessrdpshell.exe C:\Archivos de Programas\Internet Explorer\iexplore.exe" localhost:3389 -u administrador -p contrasena Me gusta: Me gusta Cargando...
GNU Binutils The GNU Binutils are a collection of binary tools. The main ones are: ld - the GNU linker. as - the GNU assembler. But they also include: addr2line - Converts addresses into filenames and line numbers. ar - A utility for creating, modifying and extracting from archives. c++filt - Filter to demangle encoded C++ symbols. dlltool - Creates files for building and using DLLs. gold - A new, faster, ELF only linker, still in beta test. gprof - Displays profiling information. nlmconv - Converts object code into an NLM. nm - Lists symbols from object files. objcopy - Copys and translates object files. objdump - Displays information from object files. ranlib - Generates an index to the contents of an archive. readelf - Displays information from any ELF format object file. size - Lists the section sizes of an object or archive file. strings - Lists printable strings from files. strip - Discards symbols. windmc - A Windows compatible message compiler. windres - A compiler for Windows resource files.
Ext2/ext3 filesystem for windows Book Excerpt: Some Productive Ubuntu Kung Fu If you use KDE, you can easily outdo tip #1 with a simple shell script, a K menu entry, and a keyboard shortcut. Save the following script to a directory in your path as gsearch: #!/bin/bash - if ! dcop | grep -q klipper; then printf 'klipper must be running to use gsearch\n' >&2 exit 1 fi query=$(dcop —user $USER klipper klipper getClipboardContents | tr ' ' '+') kstart —window '. Then add a K menu entry for it and give it a keyboard shortcut, such as Ctrl+Shift+G. Now you can search Google for any terms you highlight/copy to the clipboard and see the results pop up in a Firefox tab.
Speaking UNIX: More shell scripting techniques Like other UNIX operating systems and Linux, the IBM AIX operating system has several powerful tools that arm systems administrators, developers, and users to tackle day-to-day tasks and to simplify their or their customers' business and life. One such tool in UNIX is the ability to write shell scripts to automate tasks, simplifying difficult or long and tedious jobs. Although some who have worked on UNIX for a couple of years have dabbled in shell scripting, they are still most likely learning the ins and outs of the operating system and haven't yet mastered scripting. This article provides tips to those wanting to learn more about shell scripting and how to begin writing more advanced scripts. Keep it simple One issue people run into when learning how to shell script well is duplicating work they've already done in a script. For example, the script shown in Listing 1 should be condensed and simplified considerably into a smaller and more clean-looking program. Listing 1. #! Listing 2. #!
Seven Post-Install Tips for Ubuntu 7.04 So, you've just installed Ubuntu 7.04, otherwise known as the "Feisty Fawn" release of everyone's favorite (for now) flavor of Linux. You booted the installation disc, looked around the test environment to discover that your hardware was working, and double-clicked the Install icon on the desktop. The Ubuntu installer helped you make room for Linux on your hard drive, and even copied over some of your documents and settings from Windows. Half an hour ago, you had only Windows on your PC, but now you have a choice at boot time, and a whole new world to explore. But wait--before you dive in too deeply, here are seven steps you can take right away to prevent common headaches and help yourself enjoy your new surroundings. 1. U.S. users may notice before too long that the right-hand Alt key on their keyboard doesn't work in Ubuntu. To get the right Alt key to behave like the left Alt key, select System, Preferences, Keyboard. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. sudo gedit /etc/apt/sources.list sudo apt-get update
Rosetta Stone for Unix Footnotes 1. In System V-based Unixes, run level relates to booting, shutdown, and single-user mode. In BSD, it has to do with security. 2. 3. 4. ioscan -funC disk may be helpful here to determine device path. 5. Universal Command Guide is a large book which covers several of the OSs in this table. UnixGuide.net has a similar table covering fewer Unix versions and a somewhat different set of tasks. Colin Barschel's Unix Toolbox cb.vu/unixtoolbox.xhtml is a wonderfully detailed handbook sorted by task area and giving both commands and config file excerpts for Linux and BSD. coolcommands is a search engine giving one-line command examples: www.coolcommands.com/index.php? Solaris / HP-UX / FreeBSD / Linux / AIX: www.unixporting.com/quickguide.html Solaris / HP-UX: soldc.sun.com/migration/hpux/migissues/. Unix / DOS: yolinux.com/TUTORIALS/unix_for_dos_users.html Unix / TSO mainframe: yolinux.com/TUTORIALS/LinuxTutorialLinuxForMainframers.html Unix history time line: www.levenez.com/unix/