I developed an interest about anti-virus software as i'm ending my faculty studies; But i bumped into Assembly, with witch i had very little to do until now; HELP ME /prog/ !!!
Is there another way to follow my dream in studying viruses and earning a living from it? i'm totally unused to this low level ASM :((
learning asm seems like a good start.
there's probably a bunch of tutorials on the internet.
wikipedia usually has a few good links as references
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Anonymous2009-03-24 7:58
is there a "good" tool for ASM?
olly/ ide are a couple of years old. Shurely something more intuitive (for idiots like me) must have been developed by now.
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Anonymous2009-03-24 8:02
i bow to u /prog/
i need a good visual, intuitive ASM debugger for my lack of braincells
i just discovered Imunity Debugger. Wonder if it's any good...
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Anonymous2009-03-24 20:52
I already know C, Lisp and Python, but it's uncool to know how to drive and not know how to ride a bicycle. It's like when someone asks you: "yeah, you know how to drive a car, but what about bikes?". So I would answer: "my other car is a bike!"
>>18 His primary contributions to open source software have been maintaining the fetchmail email client for a certain time, and gpsd. Other contributions have included Emacs editing modes and portions of libraries like GNU ncurses, giflib/libungif, and libpng. Raymond is the author of a number of How-to documents and FAQs, many of which are included in the Linux Documentation Project corpus. Raymond's 2003 book The Art of Unix Programming covers Unix history and culture, and modern user tools available for programming and accomplishing tasks in Unix. Raymond has also been the editor of the Jargon File since he adopted it in 1990. Raymond has been the author of the included guide document for NetHack for several versions.
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Anonymous2009-03-27 11:33
More
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Anonymous2009-03-27 14:38
How is TXT an acronym for Text?
How is EXE an acronym for Executable?
How is usr an acronym for User?