From announce at ruxcon.org.au Fri Oct 22 04:40:23 2010 From: announce at ruxcon.org.au (announce at ruxcon.org.au) Date: Fri, 22 Oct 2010 13:40:23 +1100 (EST) Subject: [sapug] Ruxcon 2010 Announcement Message-ID: <20101022024023.25EE48A08@ruxcon.org.au> Ruxcon is Australia's premier technical computer security conference, held at the CQ function centre in Melbourne. After a break in 2009, Ruxcon is back and bigger than ever. Ruxcon brings together the best and the brightest security talent in the Australia-Pacific region through live presentations, activities, and demonstrations. This year we also feature a fantastic lineup with several high-profile international speakers. Ruxcon 2010 will be held on the weekend of the 20th of November to the 21th of November. Doors open at 9:00am and the first presentation commences at 10:00am. There are a limited number of tickets available and they are going very quickly. Please register via the Ruxcon website to ensure that you don't miss out: http://www.ruxcon.org.au/register. Ruxcon 2010 Presentations (http://www.ruxcon.org.au/presentations): 1. Milking a Horse or Executing Remote Code in Modern Java Web Frameworks - Meder Kydryraliev 2. Code Analysis Carpentry - Sean Heelan 3. Breaking Virtualisation by Switching the CPU to Virtual 8086 Mode - Endrazine 4. Instrumenting the Linux Kernel with Kprobes for Anti-Security - Ryan O'Neill 5. Will it Blend? - Billy Rios 6. Prospecting for Rootite: More Code Coverage, More Bugs, Less Wasted Effort - Ben Nagy 7. DEP in Depth - Brett Moore 8. Understanding the Java Serialisation Attack Surface - Daniel Grzelak 9. Web Scanners FOR THE WIN... - Louis Nyffenegger 10. We've been Hacked! What Went Wrong and Why - Mark Goudie 11. An overview of AFP High Tech Crime Operations - Alex Tilley 12. Killing the Elephant in the Room - Enterprise Vulnerability Management Tactics - Matt J 13. Fast Automated Unpacking and Classification of Malware - Silvio Cesare 14. Hackerspace - Robots & Dinosaurs - Gavin Smith 15. 'No Holds Barred' Penetration Testing - Jarrod Loidl 16. The Computer Forensic & eDiscovery Tools that Time Forgot - Adam Daniel 17. How to Do Real World Computer Forensics... And Not Get Burned - Nick Klein 18. Ghost in the Shell(code) - Matthew de Carteret 19. Hooray for Reading: The Kindle and You - Peter Hannay 20. The Australian Internet Security Initiative - Fighting Botnets at the Source - Mark Chaffe 21. Security in APCO P25 Public-Safety Communications Networks - Stephen Glass & Matt Robert 22. Automatically Identifying C structs from Binaries - Kuza55 23. Rux Lox - An Introduction to Lockpicking - Graeme "Wily" Bell 24. RFID Shits and Giggles - Edward Farrell 25. DnsUberNOOBer - DNS Enumeration on Steroids! - Jaco van Heerden 26. Virtualisation Security State of the Union - David Jorm More to come... As in previous years, there will be events and competitions, which allow attendees to have fun, win prizes and socialise, all while enjoying a cold beer on an Australian summer's day. For more information please visit: www.ruxcon.org.au. Hope to see you there, Regards, Ruxcon 2010 Staff From dt-sapug at handcraftedcomputers.com.au Fri Oct 29 23:36:27 2010 From: dt-sapug at handcraftedcomputers.com.au (Daryl Tester) Date: Sat, 30 Oct 2010 08:06:27 +1030 Subject: [sapug] Found recently while trawling the interweb seas. Message-ID: <4CCB3E5B.7090800@handcraftedcomputers.com.au> >From the guy who brought you "Generator Tricks for System Programmers" comes "A Curious Course on Coroutines and Concurrency". I particularly like the "Pictorial Overview (Head Explosion Index)" graph on page 5. -- Regards, Daryl Tester "It's bad enough to have two heads, but it's worse when one's unoccupied." -- Scatterbrain, "I'm with Stupid." From ishwor.gurung at gmail.com Sat Oct 30 15:56:14 2010 From: ishwor.gurung at gmail.com (Ishwor Gurung) Date: Sun, 31 Oct 2010 00:56:14 +1100 Subject: [sapug] Found recently while trawling the interweb seas. In-Reply-To: <4CCB3E5B.7090800@handcraftedcomputers.com.au> References: <4CCB3E5B.7090800@handcraftedcomputers.com.au> Message-ID: Hi all. Thanks for sharing Daryl :-) I also recommend David's "Python Essential Reference" for any Python hackers. It's been a handy manual to have around so far (lots of neat tricks and you get that "ahh!! that's how you do it!!" when you go through it). Again, heartily recommend it :-) Cheers. -- Regards Ishwor Gurung Key id:0xa98db35e Key fingerprint:FBEF 0D69 6DE1 C72B A5A8 35FE 5A9B F3BB 4E5E 17B5