/Old/old_int.html
HTML | 284 lines | 280 code | 4 blank | 0 comment | 0 complexity | 1617e726fb34370e2d0cfa6f5755658c MD5 | raw file
- <html><head><title>mammon_: Of Interest Archives</title></head>
- <body bgcolor=800040 background="border.gif" text=000000 link=A0A0A0 vlink=A08080>
- <table width=775 border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0><tr><tr><td><center><font face="Arial" color=FF0000>
-
- </font></center><P></td></tr><tr>
- <td width=610 valign=top><! Of Interest>
- <table valign=top><tr valign=top><td bgcolor=000000 valign=top width=90><font size=+1 face="Arial" color=FF0000><b>of interest archives<b></font></td><td width=545></td></tr><tr><td></td></tr><tr><td colspan=2><font color=a0a0a0 Face="Courier">
-
- <LI><B>12.02</b> <i>Stoppard</i>: For those of you who did not know, I have long been a fan of
- <a href="http://www.infind.com/infind/infind.exe?query=Tom+Stoppard&time=7&x=54&y=15">Tom
- Stoppard</a>'s works. Apparently my favorite bit of <a href="http://www.alumni.caltech.edu/~rbell/relthing.htm">Stoppard dialogue</a>
- --I think I had <a href="http://www.alumni.caltech.edu/~rbell/relthing.htm">this</a> very argument
- with a girlfriend-- is appreciated by <a href="http://www.alumni.caltech.edu/~rbell/">others</a> as well.
- And again, gratitude to kuririn for the <a href="http://www.rjgeib.com/thoughts/thoughts.html">poetry</a>.
- Finally, the more discriminating readers of this site may enjoy some, albeit non-Stoppard,
- <a href="http://eserver.org/drama/short.html">short</a> and
- <a href="http://eserver.org/drama/long.html">long</a> plays.
- <LI><B>11.29</b> <i>Philosophy with a Torque Wrench</i>: Awhile ago Harma and I had pretty cool
- thread going on Fravia's Message Board, and having nothing better to do I decided to upload it here before the
- board shuffles off this mortal coil. <a href="parti.txt">Part I</a> was the longest and the one I
- enjoyed the most--though no-one got my Steven Brust "bones?" reference. Or maybe they did...
- <a href="Partii.txt">Part II</a> is missing my long response as my Netscape crashed right when I
- hit send; thus this thread has always been missing my tender invective.
- <a href="Partiii.txt">PartIII</a> concerns one of my favorite topics: the worth (or lack thereof) to
- which humanity lays claim.
- <LI><B>11.29</b> <i>Flow Analyzer</i>: Rev 2. Now exports IDC scripts, has a few new features
- and a <i>killer</i> IDC script for the main call trace. Get it below...
- <LI><B>11.27</b> <i>Active X</i>: I just returned from an errand run wherein I picked up
- <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0811212459/qid=912231865/sr=1-3/002-3607801-8858210">8 Stories</a> by Dylan Thomas,
- <a href="http://www.lancutdistillery.euro-index.com.pl/polmosflavouredvodka.htm">Zytnia Vodka</a> and some Juliano dry vermouth,
- and <a href="http://www.mrbunny.com/">Mr Bunny's</a> <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0201485362/n/qid=912232190/sr=2-1/002-3607801-8858210">Guide to Active X</a>. All are highly recommended (though I like
- D'Aquino vermouth best: does anyone even distribute that anymore?)
- <li><B>11.27</b> <i>Win32ASM</i>: There is now an IRC channel/server for Windows Assembly Language at
- #win32 asm or via the <a href="http://c71114-a.potlnd1.or.home.com/">web interface</a>, courtesy of
- Saqquara.
-
- <LI><B>11.26</b> <i>Flow Analyzer</i>: I have started work on what should eventually turn into a useful reverse engineering tool. Those wishing a preview may
- <a href="FlowAnalyzer/FlowAnalyzer.zip">examine</a> it right now, though it has maybe a quarter of its intended functionality. If you do not understand what it is
- or why it exists after the first usage, return it postage pre-paid for a full refund.
- <LI><B>10.31</b> <i>Hiatus II</i>: The web is taking too much of time; following the message boards, trying to keep old projects alive, seeking out new things.
- I'm behind on my Unix work, I'm behind on my programming, I'm behind on my writing, I'm behind on my painting, I'm even behind on my email. Cracking concerns and
- questions keep dragging me back to the Windows platform when I am now on Linux (and never want to go back!). So I'm giving up the ol' web for the time being, I am henceforth going to
- ignore my site, the message boards, and any cracking/help requests related to the Windows platform (unless they're *really* intriguing). I will of course still answer email. I will be on ICQ.
- I will continue to work on the APJ, though Visual Assembler I quite frankly do not have time for. Perhaps I'll return in a few weeks/months, perhaps even with a newer incarnation of my page ;)
- <LI><B>10.31</b> <i>APJ</i>: I need more articles for the December issue! Anything to do with assembly language programming, even code snippets... Check the <a href="http://pluto.beseen.com/boardroom/q/19784/">Message Board</a>, <a href="mailto:mammon_@hotmail.com">mail me</a>, or
- check out the <a href="http://asmjournal.freeservers.com/fsguestbook.html">APJ Guestbook</a>. Also, the freeservers site has horrivle uptime, so I have mirrored it <a href="APJ/index.html">here</a>.
- <LI><B>10.31</b> <i>Visual Assembler</i>: I do not have time to co-ordinate this project. I do have time to advise, and to help work on it. I have the addresses, etc. of all the coders and interested parties,
- but I am not going to bug them about working (apologies to all who have expressed interest in the past 1-2 months, I will reply to you eventually). So, in short, I need a successor to co-ordinate design plans with,
- to take over the daily duties of the project (moderating the message board, maintaining contact with the coders, etc)--any interested parties may <a href="mailto:mammon_@hotmail.com">email me</a>.
-
- <LI><B>10.16</b> <i>Assembly Programming Journal</i>: <i>APJ</i> first Issue is out! Also, looking for successor to handle Visasm project in my absence.
- <LI><B>9.16</b> <i>Linux Source</i>: Two cool kernel source navigators are available for Linux. The one at
- <a href="http://sunsite.unc.edu/linux-source/">Sunsite</a> is alright, but I very much prefer the
- <a href="http://zaphod.ethz.ch/linux/kernel-2.1/">Zaphod</a> server (must be my Beeblebrox fetish). A couple of other good
- linux pages include the <a href="http://www.ngs.fi/lsm/">Linux Software Map</a> and the <a href=http://www.linuxprogramming.com/">Linux Programming</a> page.
- <LI><B>9.03</b> <i>ASM Programming Journal</i>: <font color=ffffff><blink>!Writers Wanted!</blink></font> So I had this idea, and it has yet to be determined whether or not it is a good one. I am looking at starting an online magazine
- (dist via email and web) dedicated to assembly language, as there seems to be a renewed interest in this style of programming. The magazine would be a platform for publishing/exchanging
- routines, optimization tips, weird asm tricks (virii, polymorphism, etc), HOW-TOs, assembler-specific coding, etc--any and every trick there is to asm coding. Of course, this is a magazine and not a web page,
- meaning that I will edit and contribute but there is no way I can do the whole thing. The Journal has a rudimentary web page <a href="http://asmjournal.freeservers.com/">here</a>, as
- well as a <a href="http://pluto.beseen.com/boardroom/q/19784/">discussion board</a> for
- posting article ideas, etc --hell, why not one more, after all they're free eh?
- <LI><B>9.02</b> <i>Coding</i>: Some interesting things in the magazine this month. <i>Microsoft Systems Journal</i> has for October an app called BugSlayer that I haven't looked at yet; however
- the real good stuff is in the September issue with Pietrek's ModuleList program (a follow up to NukeDLL) and a utility called Control Spy; the source for these programs may be downloaded
- by issue at the MSJ <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/msj/code.htm">source code</a> site. <i>Windows Developer Journal</i> features an article by Sven Schreiber (of Walk32 fame) on customizing the WinMain
- function for Win32 programs (useful technique if you're into code generators); source for the current issue can be downloaded from WDJ's <a href="http://www.wdj.com/code/">site</a>. While out traipsing the web for this source I came across the following
- very good coding and "coding theory" links:
- <a href="http://www.netalive.org/codersguild/contents.html">Coder's Guild</a>,
- <a href="http://www.yahoo.com/Computers_and_Internet/Programming_Languages/Magazines/">Yahoo: Programming Magazines</a>,
- <a href="http://www.netti.fi/~simos/oasis/">Programmer's Oasis</a>,
- <a href="http://www.st.rim.or.jp/~kanada/programming.html">Programming & Computational Languages: A Subject Guide</a>,
- <a href="http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs.cmu.edu/user/mleone/web/language-research.html">Resources for Programming Language Research</a>, and
- <a href="http://www.nullstone.com/htmls/connections.htm">The Compiler Connection</a>.
- <LI><B>8.31</b> <I>Book Exchange</i>: One of my side projects has coincided with similar efforts from a few others and there is now an
- attempt to create an online book exchange to enable the sharing of information. Ideas on how to manage such an endeavor as well as
- possible resources for sharing would be welcome.
- <LI><B>8.08</b> <I>Wrox Source</i>: Does anyone out there have the source (or the pdf file ;) to the book <b>Revolutionary Guide To Bitmapped Graphics</b> by Wrox Press?
- I am interested in checking out the code at the very least, but cannot see paying US$40 for material that has been covered many times over on the web (and, therefore, on my hard drive ;).
- <LI><B>8.08</b> <I>Miscellaneous</i>: The length of time between updates to this site is a measure of how busy I am.
- The links page needs a rework, there are more "tales" to polish off and upload, not to mention the first two tales which were never finished.
- But on to the news... CrackZ has put up an excellent <a href="http://www.zencrack.org">page</a> and fortunately posted it to Scenelink, where
- I found myself recently; ZenCrack may be a little orcish in the title, but there is a lot of good info there, plus a ton of material for
- the beginner--it is good to see a page arise that like the "main three" (greythorne, caligo, fravia) can stand on its own.
- Another excellent site is <a href="http://www.la-online.com/">LA Online</a>, with ASM links/tutes/info, virus coding, reality cracking, Picasso Pics,
- bits of Nietzche and a dash of S&M, all done with a certain graphic style...what else would you expect from LA?
- Miscellaneous virii info/source/etc can be found at <a href="http://www.codebreakers.org/frames.htm">CodeBreakers</a>, and every "zine" you will ever need
- can be found either at <a href="http://www.giga.or.at/pub/hacker/zines">Giga</a> or at <a href="http://www.etext.org/Zines/ASCII/">Etext</a> (be <b>sure</b> to read <i>BOFH</i>).
- Also, there is an <a href="http://www.sandpile.org/forum/index.shtml">Assembly Language Forum</a> hosted by Sandpile (in fact there are a few of these around; see the
- new section below). And no update would be complete without mention of the new
- <a href="http://203.148.211.201/visasm">home</a> for Visual Assembler (with the Fortunecity page retained as a mirror),
- hosted by Iczelion (who has his own very fantastic <a href="http://203.148.211.201/index.html">page</a>).
-
-
- <LI><b>7.20</b> <I>Win32 Coding</i>: While fruitlessly searching for information on writing a registry editor I came across the
- following interesting essays on M$oft's site, some of which I had read and some which I had not:
- at the base URL for <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/win32dev/wcnt.htm">Win32 Development</a>, there are essays on
- <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/win32dev/base/pagetest.htm">DLL Rebasing<a/>,
- <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/win32dev/base/mmfile.htm">Memory-Mapped Files<a/>,
- <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/win32dev/base/threadli.htm">Multi-Threaded Applications<a/>,
- <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/win32dev/base/pefile.htm">PE File Format<a/>,
- <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/win32dev/ui/hooks32.htm">Windows Hooks<a/>,
- <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/win32dev/ui/fileview.htm">File Viewers<a/>, and
- <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/win32dev/ui/shellex2.htm">Shell Extensions<a/>. There are also pages for
- <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/windows/Downloads/default.asp?custarea=bus&site=family&openmenu=winres&highlighteditem=in this section">software downloads</a> and
- <a href="http://www.microsoft.com/windows/Solutions/default.asp?custarea=bus&site=family&openmenu=winres&highlighteditem=in this section">demos</a>.
- My original question, however, remains unanswered: <b>How can one code a registry editor that will view/edit/import/export
- information in an <i>off-line</i> registry</b>, that is, from the component .dat files? I have a need for such an editor
- quite often, yet the technique used by standard resource editors is the RegConnectRegistry API function provided by
- ADVAPI32, which will connect to a computer and load the open "key handle" to its registry. I suppose what is needed is to trace through
- the initial registry initialization at startup and mimic the loading code in an editor, a terrible amount of work. (Note 8.15: got some
- interesting ideas from Spyder and Imation on this--thanks guys :). One more thing--and thanks to Pr0t0n for responding with the stub thing--I know
- about the regedit DOS stub; I just have the take the time to reverse it and port it to a Win32 App like regedit. Perhaps in October. Hmm, it's amazing
- how many people out there like playing with the registry :)
-
- <LI><b>7.06</b> <I>Batch File Programming</i>: DOS batch-file programming is tedious and difficult--like coding with one
- hand and four of the next one's fingers tied behind your back--but it is challenging and it does force you to be clever
- (much like hunting with a stone axe will make you a more clever hunter than if you used, say, a .30-06). Some very helpful
- hints can be found at the <a href="http://www.calweb.com/~webspace/batch/index.htm">DOS batch Programming</a> page,
- at <a href="http://www.maem.umr.edu/~batch/">DOS Batch Language: A personal View</a>,
- at the <a href="http://www.nc5.infi.net/~wtnewton/batch/">Batch File Stuff</a> page (which includes a low-down
- debug-driven disassembler), and also at <a href="http://student.vub.ac.be/~dvandeun/">Dirk van Deun's</a> <a href="http://student.vub.ac.be/~dvandeun/batcoll.all">Batch File Collection</a>
- (don't forget to check out his <a href="http://student.vub.ac.be/~dvandeun/batvirus.all">Batch file virus</a>).
- Disks for the <a href="http://www.wambooli.com/not/archives/advanced.batch.files/">Advanced MS-DOS Batch File Programming</a>
- and the <a href="http://www.wambooli.com/not/archives/enhanced.batch.files/">Enhanced MS-DOS Batch File Programming</a> books is
- also available.
-
- <LI><b>7.02</b> <I>Search Bookmarks</i>: A Netscape bookmark file of current search engines (plus a few bonuses ;) is now
- available at <a href="search.html">search.html</a>: import it into your Netscape bookmarks and it will appear as the subfolder
- "Search". Current plans include similar bookmark files for programming and security links; recommendations of <b>stable pages</b>
- are welcome.
-
- <LI><b>5.02</b> <I>Visual Assembler</i>: <a href="http://www.fortunecity.com/skyscraper/lycos/403">Visual Assembler</a> will be a Win32 IDE for assembly programming that will apply RAD programming techniques to the asm language. Despite Kauler's demonstration of how to implement classes in TASM, this will <i>not</i> be
- a "Visual" tool that relies on class libraries (like C Builder, VB, Delphi, and MFC do) but rather will be made up of a number of .asm modules (as per the programming method you may remember from reading
- your Peter Norton asm book, modular assembly: no surprises here) that use the Win32 API for their "objects" (therefore you need no extra DLLs and your program ships small!). The coding for this will not be too
- difficult but will be tedious as there will be a lot of it. I am looking for both asm coders for the modules and C coders for the IDE as I hate coding. This project is going to be produced and distributed for
- <b>free</b> (as fits with my philosophy) in accordance with the GNU license or something similar. Work is being done in conjunction with the HCU as that is where the most interest lies; however anyone may
- contribute without being a member or affiliate of the HCU (<a href="mailto:mammon_@hotmail.com">contact</a> me for more info). The more who contribute, the more features there will be and the quicker it will get through beta!
-
- <LI><b>4.28</b> <i>Forum</i>: Yes, the forum is down. No, I do not know why. This is what comes of using somebody else's code.
- I have set up a
- <a href="http://www.greenspun.com/bboard/q-and-a.tcl?topic=reverse%20engineering">backup forum</a> that can be used in times like this.
-
- <LI><b>4.02</b> <i>Web Ring</i>: There is a <a href="http://crackring.ufoplanet.com/">Reverse Engineering Web Ring</a> now in existence, with such distingushed members as
- <a href="http://www.jjcom.com/~mexelite/linkp.html">MEXELiTE</a> and <a href="http://www.lordcaligo.org/">Lord Caligo</a>. Unfortunately the ring seems to primarily be
- made up of cracking sites, meaning there will be a lot of "look-what-our-group-did" sites, but still there should be a few pages with valuable information.
-
- <LI><b>3.31</b> <i>Java</i>: <a href="http://kimera.cs.washington.edu/disassembler.html">Kimera</a> is an online Java disassembler viewing Java bytecodes rather than Java source code; the bytecodes can then
- be run through the <a href="http://www.mrl.nyu.edu/meyer/jasmin/">Jasmin</a> assembler for running on a Java VM.
- Other Java disassemblers include <a href="http://www-sunos4.nada.kth.se/javadoc/JDK1.1.1/tooldocs/win32/javap.html">JavaP</a>,
- <a href="http://www.wingsoft.com/javadis.html">WingDis</a>,
- <a href="http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~benjasik/dis/">Dis</a>,
- and the Java Decompiler source on the <a href="http://users.neca.com/vmis/classprj.htm">Technology Cornucopia</a> page.
- Somewhat related and of general interest is the <a href="http://www.gr.osf.org/~emcmanus/programs/makedis.html">MakeDis</a>
- disassembler assembler which, given an input file of processor opcodes, will generate a disassembler (in C source) for that processor.
-
- <LI><b>3.30</b> <i>CGI</i>: A number of online CGI resources are available from Yahoo's <a
- href=" http://www.yahoo.com/Computers_and_Internet/Internet/World_Wide_Web/CGI___Common_Gateway_Interface/">CGI Topic</a>, including
- <a href="http://blackcat.brynmawr.edu/~nswoboda/prog-html.html">Building HTML Interfaces</a>,
- <a href="http://www.itm.com/cgicollection/">CGI Bot</a>,
- <a href="http://www.jmarshall.com/easy/cgi/">CGI Made Easy</a>,
- <a href="http://www.cgi-resources.com/">CGI Resource Index</a>,
- the <a href="http://hoohoo.ncsa.uiuc.edu/cgi/">CGI Specification</a>,
- libraries in <a href="http://www.boutell.com/cgic/">C</a>
- <a href="http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/People/daman/cgi /">C </a>
- <a href="http://www.NeoSoft.com/tcl/ftparchive/sorted/net/tcl-cgi-1.1/">Tcl</a>
- <a href="http://www-genome.wi.mit.edu/ftp/pub/software/WWW/cgi_docs.html#contents">Perl</a>
- <a href="http://cgi-lib.stanford.edu/cgi-lib/">(2)</a>,
- <a href="http://lpage.com/cgiexample.html">LPage CGI School</a>,
- Selena Sols's <a href="http://www.extropia.com/Scripts/">Scripts</a> and <a href="http://www.extropia.com/Library/">Library</a>, and
- <a href="http://awsd.com/scripts/index.shtml">WebScripts</a>. CGI enthusiasts may wish to check out the
- <a href="http://www.python.org/">Python</a>,
- <a href="http://www.perl.com/">Perl</a>, and
- <a href="http://www.tcltk.com/">Tcl</a> scripting languages as well.
-
- <LI><b>3.18</b> <i>Survey</i>: A survey of the <a href="toolkit.html">tools</a> and <a href="curriculum.html">knowledge</a>
- required for reverse engineering and cracking has been posted to aid aspirants in this field.
-
- <LI><b>3.10</b> <i>GNU/O'Reilly</i>: All of the free GNU software can be found not only at the GNU project's
- <a href="http://www.gnu.ai.mit.edu/">site</a>, but also at a faster mirror <a href="http://www.delorie.com/gnu/">here</a>. In addition,
- the O'Reilly source code and the downloads from many other periodicals can be found at <a href="ftp://ftp.uu.net/published/">ftp.uu.net</a>.
-
- <LI><b>3.10</b> <i>ReactOS</i>: ReactOS is a project for creating a Win32 OS under the GNU public
- license. I encourage all talented programmers/reversers to contribute to or support this project--not
- only does it provide an opportunity to combat the threat of Micro$oft Monopoly, it is also a chance
- to redo the OS <i>right</i>, i.e. without the bugs. The project so far consists of the
- <a href="http://www.sid-dis.com/reactos/home.htm">main</a> page, the
- <a href="http://www.virtualprojects.org/html/reactos.html">Application Team</a>, the
- <a href="http://www.geocities.com/SiliconValley/Peaks/1957/reactos.html">Kernel Team</a>, the
- <a href="http://www.htsa.hva.nl/~nesbr/freedows/">Win32 API Team</a>, an
- <a href="ftp://ftp.sid-dis.com/pub/ReactOS/">FTP Site</a>, an
- <a href="http://www.sid-dis.com/reactos/chat.htm">IRC Thread</a>, a
- <a href="http://www.sid-dis.com/reactos/listserv.htm"> Mailing List</a>, an
- <a href="http://www.sid-dis.com/archive/index.htm">Email Archive</a>, and a
- <a href="http://www.sid-dis.com/reactos/board.htm">Message Board</a>. The project also maintains an
- excellent <a href="http://www.sid-dis.com/reactos/">Knowledge Base</a>.
-
- <LI><b>3.09</b> <i>Product Watch</i>: The following have caught my eye as possible tools/targets:
- Memcheck by stratosware, Spyworks by Desaware, Valkyrie by Codeworks, Codewright by Premia,
- Vedit by Greenview Data Inc, SPF/Win and SPF SourceEdit by Command Technology Corp, PCLint by Gimpel,
- Hamilton C Shell by Hamilton Laboratories, Visual Parse by Sandstone Tech, Vermont Hightest by
- Vermont Creative Software, C-Doc Pro by Software Blacksmiths (demo avail), Exceed by Hummingbird,
- Modelview Advantage by Intergraph, Soft F/X by Byte By Byte, Protospeed by Progress, and StreamTeam
- by Paladin Software. A couple of these I have in old version on CDROMs from conventions and such, but
- most I have yet to start looking for. Anyone with info on these products is welcome to contact me.
-
- <LI><b>2.23</b> <i>Linux</i>: Enourmous documenation can be found at the <a href="http://sunsite.unc.edu/mdw/">Linux Documentation Project</a>, including
- the <a href="http://linuxwww.db.erau.edu/LPG/">Linux Programmer's Guide</a>,
- the <a href="http://sunsite.unc.edu/mdw/LDP/sag/long-contents.html">Linux System Administrator's Guide</a>,
- the <a href="http://sunsite.unc.edu/mdw/LDP/nag/node1.html#SECTION001000000">Linux Network Administrator's Guide</a>,
- and the <a href="http://www.redhat.com:8080/HyperNews/get/khg.html">Linux Kernel Hacker's Guide</a>. Also online are the
- <a href="http://www.ctyme.com/linuxdoc.htm">man pages</a>, the <a href="http://www.ssc.com/lg/">Linux Gazette</a>,
- the <a href="http://www.quillandmouse.com/reading.htm">Reading List</a>,
- and the <a href="http://sunsite.unc.edu/mdw/HOWTO/HOWTO-INDEX-3.html#ss3.1">How-Tos</a>.
-
- <LI><b>2.16</b> <i>Tools</i>: Tools page updated and reformatted ("internally") for easier maintenance. Apologies for the delay to all who sent me utilities for review: rest assured I was not
- disappointed by a single one.
- <LI><b>1.13</b> <i>Merger</i>: Ghiribizzo and I have merged our WebApp discussion boards. At last, full-time coverage (more or less)!
- <LI><b>1.10</b> <i>Hiatus</i>: No explanation. This page is now on hiatus. It may be updated, but only infrequently.
- <LI><b>1.09</B> <i>CrackPC</i>: Wouldn't it be great if the Soft-Ice Command Reference was less than 3 MB, did not require a postscript reader,
- and was searchable? Now it is: check out <a href="http://www.fortunecity.com/littleitaly/machievelli/31/crackpc.zip">crackpc.zip</a>!
-
- <LI><b>1.05</b> <i>Browser wars</i>: New Browser avail from www.operasoftware.com (Thanks to MP5 for info): 1.19MB download,
- 2.11MB installed, allegedly more stable than Netscape or MSIE (maybe...I only crashed it once!). Good UI,
- easy to use, v-e-r-y configurable. Patch offset 46E23 from 7436 to EB5F and it's yours forever. [beta 11 only]
-
- <LI><b>1.01</b> <i>Layout</i>: This page was designed on Netscape 3.01 with 24-bit color @ 800x600 resolution, using 11pt Courier New as the default font. May the gods help you if you use otherwise... </font></td></tr></table>
- </td><td width=40> </td>
- <td width=130 valign=top><! Toolbar>
- <table border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0><font color=FF0040> <TR><TD></TD></TR><tr ><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="https://www.replay.com/remailer/anon.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><b>AnonyMail</b></font></a></td></tr>
- <tr ><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="http://www.anonymizer.com/surf_free.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><b>AnonyWeb</b></font></a></td></tr>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="assembly.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><B>Assembly</b></font></a></td></tr></font>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="disasm.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><B>Disassembly</b></font></a></td></tr></font>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=37"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><b>Forum</b></font></a></td></tr>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="http://kryten.eng.monash.edu.au/gspamt.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><b>NetInfo</b></font></a></td></tr>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="projects.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><B>Projects</b></font></a></td></tr></font>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="registry.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><B>Registry</b></font></a></td></tr></font>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="links.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><b>Sites</b></font></a></td></tr>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="ice.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><B>Soft-Ice</b></font></a></td></tr></font>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="tales.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><B>Tales</b></font></a></td></tr></font>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="tools.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><b>Tools</b></font></a></td></tr>
- <tr><td height=50 valign=baseline><a href="web.html"><font face="Arial" color=FF0040><b>Web</b></font></a></td></tr>
- </table>
- </td></table><table width=775 border=0 cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0><tr><td width=745>
- <BR><center></center><BR>
- <table>
- <tr><td bgcolor=000000 valign=top width=200><b><a name="branches"></a></td></tr>
- <tr><td><b>
- <a href="http://asmjournal.freeservers.com/"><font color=FF0000>APJ</font></a> <font color=000000>-+-</font>
- <a href="curriculum.html"><font color=FF0000>Curriculum</font></a> <font color=000000>-+-</font>
- <a href="http://disc.server.com/discussion.cgi?id=37"><font color=FF0000>Reverse Engineering Forum</font></a> <font color=000000>-+-</font>
- <a href="toolkit.html"><font color=FF0000>Toolkit</font></a> <font color=000000>-+-</font>
- <a href="http://www.fortunecity.com/skyscraper/lycos/403/"><font color=FF0000>Visual</font></a> <a href="http://203.148.211.201/visasm/"><font color=FF0000>Assembler</font></a>
- </b><P><BR></td></tr>
-
- <tr><td><P></td></tr>
-
-
- </tr> </table>
-
-
- <BR><P><BR><center><a href="http://Counter.telecom.at">
- <img src="http://Counter.telecom.at/allworld/Count.cgi?dd=D|df=mammon_@usa.net"></A>
- <BR><a href="mailto:mammon_@hotmail.com"><img src="pgram.gif" border=0>
- </a><P><a href="mailto:mammon_@hotmail.com"><font face="Courier" color=FF0000>Mail</font>
- </a> <a href="mammon.asc"><font face="Courier" color=FF0000>PGP</font>
- </a></center>
- </body>
- </html>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-