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Mac OS Hacking Professionelle Werkzeuge Und Methoden Zur Forensischen Analyse Des Apple-Betriebssystems
Alle Übungen im Buch zum Download Marc Brandt Mac OS Hacking Professionelle Werkzeuge und Methoden zur forensischen Analyse des Apple-Betriebssystems • Sicherungs- und Analysetechniken für digitale Spuren • Integrierte Mac-OS-Sicherheitssysteme angreifen und überwinden • Forensische Analysestrategien zu Spotlight, Time Machine und iCloud 60551-9 Titelei.qxp_Layout 1 13.07.17 10:18 Seite 1 Marc Brandt Mac OS Hacking 60551-9 Titelei.qxp_Layout 1 13.07.17 10:18 Seite 3 Marc Brandt Mac OS Hacking Professionelle Werkzeuge und Methoden zur forensischen Analyse des Apple-Betriebssystems • Sicherungs- und Analysetechniken für digitale Spuren • Integrierte Mac-OS-Sicherheitssysteme angreifen und überwinden • Forensische Analysestrategien zu Spotlight, Time Machine und iCloud 60551-9 Titelei.qxp_Layout 1 13.07.17 10:18 Seite 4 Bibliografische Information der Deutschen Bibliothek Die Deutsche Bibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte Daten sind im Internet über http://dnb.ddb.de abrufbar. Alle Angaben in diesem Buch wurden vom Autor mit größter Sorgfalt erarbeitet bzw. zusammengestellt und unter Einschaltung wirksamer Kontrollmaßnahmen reproduziert. Trotzdem sind Fehler nicht ganz auszuschließen. Der Verlag und der Autor sehen sich deshalb gezwungen, darauf hinzuweisen, dass sie weder eine Garantie noch die juristische Verantwortung oder irgendeine Haftung für Folgen, die auf fehlerhafte Angaben zurückgehen, überneh- men können. Für die Mitteilung etwaiger Fehler sind Verlag und Autor jederzeit dankbar. Internetadressen oder Ver- sionsnummern stellen den bei Redaktionsschluss verfügbaren Informationsstand dar. Verlag und Autor übernehmen keinerlei Verantwortung oder Haftung für Veränderungen, die sich aus nicht von ihnen zu vertretenden Umständen ergeben. Evtl. beigefügte oder zum Download angebotene Dateien und Informationen dienen ausschließlich der nicht gewerblichen Nutzung. -
Shareware Solutions II
SharewareShareware SolutionsSolutions IIII An Exciting Apple II Journey Into The Future Volume 4, Issue 2 Post-KansasFest, 1998 KansasFest ’98 Countdown To Kfest the act, borrowing Ewens group held for any previous Kfest in at of Spectrum testers to put least one very significant man- In the weeks and months that NiftySpell through its paces. ner. In prior years, no one aside led up to KansasFest 98, the from the small Kfest Coordi- Apple II development communi- The Apple II development com- nating Committee had much in- ty literally worked around the munitys hard work paid off for put into the planning of the clock preparing for the annual the 60 Kfest attendees who event, and certainly, no one out- Apple II midsummer conference were treated to more product side of the committee was in- that has been held each year demonstrations and previews of volved in setting up the sched- since 1989 in Kansas City. As upcoming releases than in any ule. But, in the Spring of 1998, July approached, many IIGS previous KansasFest. As con- the Kfest Coordinating Commit- programmers and developers firmed by the events at Kfest tee set up an Internet-based worked many long hours and 98, the Apple II is alive and Kfest mailing list to which any- had many sleepless nights well and continues to flourish in one with the ability to receive e- while trying to complete their its third decade of service! mail could subscribe. And sub- many projects in time to stun scribe they did! the assembled masses at Avila There were basically two differ- College. -
The American Short Story: from Poe to O. Henry. a Hypercard Application
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 330 315 IR 014 934 AUTHOR May, Charles TITLE The American Short Story: From Poe to 0. Henry. A HyperCard Application. INSTITUTION California State Univ., Long Beach. English Dept. PUB DATE 90 NOTE 38p.; Supported by the 1989-90 Dissemination Grant from the California State University Lottery Revenue Program for Instructional Development and Technology. PUB TYPE Guides - Non-Classroom Use (055) EDRS PRICE MF01/PCO2 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Authoring Aids (Programing); *Computer Assisted Instruction; Computer Software Development; Elementary Secondary Education; English Instruction; English Literature; Higher Education; *Hypermedia; Short Stories IDENTIFIERS Apple Macintosh ABSTRACT This report describes a computer-assisted instructional application created on a Macintosh computer using HyperCard software. The iL3tructional program is aimed at those who teach college-level English education courses and those whoare planning a course on the use of technology in the English classroom. It is noted that the HyperCard software was developed to aid in teaching English literature, specifically short stories, and provides access not only to the text of the short story, but also to concepts and patterns throughout the story. The rationale behind using the Macintosh computer, the concept of hypermedia and hypertext and, in particular, the use of HyperCard on the Macintosh, are discussed. Also described is the theory of short story analysis that underlies the computer application. The report concludes with a detailed discussion of programming using the HyperCard software, and suggests a method for creating unique applications to meet the needs of individual classroomE. (DB) *********************************************************************** * Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made * * from the original document. -
Hypertalk: the Language for the Rest of Us
HyperTalk: The Language for the Rest of Us Kyle Wheeler January 18, 2004 Contents 1 Introduction 1 Introduction 1 There is, perhaps, no piece of software written by Ap- ple Computer, Inc. more prone to generating extreme 2 History 1 emotions in its users than its operating system. Next 2.1 TheBirth ................ 1 below that, however, is HyperCard. Designed and re- 2.2 TheLife................. 2 leased in 1987 by Bill Atkinson [7], HyperCard was an 2.3 TheDeath................ 2 instant success. Leveraging the power and simplicity 2.4 TheLegend ............... 2 of its scripting language, HyperTalk, designed by Bill Atkinson and by Dan Winkler [1], HyperCard demys- 3 Goals 2 tified the art of creating software. The language has a grammar and syntax similar to English, and as such ap- 4 Syntax Semantics 3 pealed to computer hobbyists, teachers, and the uniniti- 4.1 Implementation Notes . 3 ated alike. The commands HyperTalk uses are similar to 4.2 Objects ................. 3 those used by the Macintosh Toolbox, the base-level API 4.3 Messages ................ 4 of Apple’s Macintosh operating system, and the logical 4.4 Handlers................. 4 structure is similar to Pascal and organized in an event- 5 Bibliography 4 driven manner [8]. A BNF 6 A.1 Scripts.................. 6 2 History A.2 Expressions ............... 6 A.3 Ordinals and Positions . 7 2.1 The Birth A.4 Chunks and Containers . 7 HyperTalk was born as the core scripting language of A.5 Objects ................. 7 the HyperCard application, developed by Bill Atkinson1 A.6 Commands . 8 for Apple Computer, Inc. in 1987 under the condition A.6.1 Command Nonterminals . -
A+ Incider Magazine July 1993
"Quality Computers' System& System 6 Bonus Pack... the SlyleWrrtar printer support -· ···.. ... Macinlosh, Apple OOS 3 3, and most cost-effective way to ··.lit Apple Pascal disk support A completely redes1gned Finder add value and fun to laster. rrrendlier, and more power lullhan ever be lore, your Apple HGS." The Finder can be set to av01d grinding your s.2s· drive:; - Tfte AppleWork s Educator When Ihe ®rnPUier. askJI yp~ to - Insert a disk it needs. you no longer h~ve ID hit Re1urn-the computer delects it aufami!tically. Bonus Pack The screen no longer switches to FlashBoot. What is raster than a lexl mode and back ta graphics speeding disk drive? A RAM disk. when launchtng some Desktop AashBoollels you automatically set up programs a super-last. super-convenient RAM New mustc tools and applica disk. tions to allow nw. programs to sound even lletfe1 The Apple II Enhancement ......__ ~ Media-control toolset and des~ accessory to al- Guide. This handy filM book Is ~ :~ c::';'"' Desk low easter tnlegrntlor ol packed with inlormation to help ~ ~·"' • vtdeo with your multime- you upgrade your Apple II. II Accessories. Just to dia presentations give you more to choose covers RAM. hard drives. accel Universal Access fea erators. the Finder. and more. lrorn, we·re giving you tures for physically several handy desk acces handicapped users Clip Art. We're throwing In over sories including· Enhanced More 1oors tor pr~ 100 beauhlul clip art images, per Calculator, Scrapbook, Games. and grammcrs1o wr1te fect lor desktop publishing or hy more. great programs. permedia applications. -
Errata: Response Analysis and Error Diagnosis Tools. INSTITUTION Illinois Univ., Urbana
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 383 202 FL 023 001 AUTHOR Hart, Robert S. TITLE Errata: Response Analysis and Error Diagnosis Tools. INSTITUTION Illinois Univ., Urbana. Language Learning Lab. REPORT NO LLL-TR-T-23-94 PUB DATE Dec 94 NOTE 114p. PUB TYPE Guides Non-Classroom Use (055) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC05 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Authorir, Aids (Programming); Comparative Analysis; *Computer Software; Data Processing; Discourse Analysis; *Error Analysis (Language); Error Patterns; *Hypermedia; *Item Analysis; Programming IDENTIFIERS *ERRATA (Hyper Card) ABSTRACT This guide to ERRATA, a set of HyperCard-based tools for response analysis and error diagnosis in language testing, is intended as a user manual and general reference and designed to be used with the software (not included here). It has three parts. The first is a brief survey of computational techniques available for dealing with student test responses, including: editing markup that identifies spelling, capitalization, and accent errors and extra, missing, or out-of-order words; pattern matching for rapid identification of specific grammatical errors, keyword searches, and easy specification of alternate answers; and error-tolerant parsing, which puts error diagnosis under control of a grammar and dictionary of the target language. The second section is a user's manual and tutorial guide, describing ERRATA and offering examples of its use. Section three is a reference manual useful to anyone with unusual analysis requirements or wanting to tailor-make responses analyses. Installation and technical information is also included, and complete program code is appended.(MSE) *********************************************************************** * Reproductions supplied by EDRS are the best that can be made from the original document. -
A Kermit File Transfer Protocol for the Apple II Series Personal Computers : John Patrick Francisco Lehigh University
Lehigh University Lehigh Preserve Theses and Dissertations 1986 A Kermit file transfer protocol for the Apple II series personal computers : John Patrick Francisco Lehigh University Follow this and additional works at: https://preserve.lehigh.edu/etd Part of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Commons Recommended Citation Francisco, John Patrick, "A Kermit file transfer protocol for the Apple II series personal computers :" (1986). Theses and Dissertations. 4628. https://preserve.lehigh.edu/etd/4628 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by Lehigh Preserve. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Lehigh Preserve. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A KERMIT FILE TRANSFER PROTOCOL FOR THE APPLE II SERIES PERSONAL COMPUTERS (Using the Apple Pascal Operating system) by John Patrick Francisco A Thesis Presented to the Graduate Committee of Lehigh University in Candidacy for the Degree of Master of Science 1n• Computer Science Lehigh University March 1986 This thesis is accepted and approved in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of science.• (date) Professor in Charge -------------- --------------- Chairman of the Division Chairman of the Department • • -11- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS It would be somewhat of an understatement to say this project was broad in scope as the disciplines involved ranged from Phychology to Electrical Engineering. Since the project required an extensive amount of detailed in formation in all fields, I was impelled to seek the help, advice and opinion of many. There were also numerous t friends and relatives upon whom I relied for both moral and financial support. -
Ftnrer's Guide Limmd WAIRANIY on MEDIA and Repij,CEMENT
-L ll. Apple'llc Plus ftnrer's Guide LIMmD WAIRANIY oN MEDIA AND REPIj,CEMENT If you discover physical defects in the manuals distributed with an Apple product or in the media on which a software product is distributed, Apple will replace the medie or manuals at no charge to you, provided you return the item to be replaced with proof of purchase to Apple or an authorized Apple dealer during the 9G day period after you purchased the software. In addition, Apple will replace damaged software media and manuals for as long as the software product is included in Apple's Media Exchange Program. Vhile not an upgrade or update method, this program offers additional protection for up to fwo years or more from the date of your original purchase. See your authorized Apple dealer for program covenge and deails. In some countries the replacement period rmy be different; check with your authorized Apple dealer. AII IMPIIED \TARMNTIES ON THE MEDIA AND MANUAIS, INCLUDING IMPI,JED WAXMNTIES OF IIERCIHNTISILITY AI{D FITNDSS FOR A PARTICTJIAR PURPOSE, ARE IIMMD IN DURATION TO NIMTY (90) DAYS FROM THE DATT OT TIIE ORIGINAI RETAIT PURCIIASI OF TIIIS PRODUCT. Even though Apple has tested the software and reviewed the documentation, APPLE MAKES NO VARRANTY OR REPRESENTATION, EITHER EXPRXSS OR IWLIED, WITII RESPECT TO SOTTWARE, ITS QUAIXTY, PERFORMANCE, MERCHAMABILITY, OR FTII\IESS FOR A PAXIICT]IAR PIJRFOSE. AS A RESULT, TIIIS SOITWARE IS SOID 1AS Is," ATID YOU, THE PI]RCTIASER, ARE ASSUMING TIIE ENTIRE RISK AS TO ns QUATXTY Ar{D PERFORMANCf,. IN NO f,\IENT VIII APPI.E BE I.IABI..E FOR DIRECT, INDIRECT, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL, OR CONSEQ{IENTIAL DAMAGES RISULflNG FROM ANy DEFECT IN TIIE SOFTWARE OR rrs DOCUMEMATION, even if advised of the possibility of such damages. -
Wednesday, April 17, 2013 4000-1200 B.C
APPLE Wednesday, April 17, 2013 4000-1200 B.C. Inhabitants of 3000 B.C. The abacus is invented the first known in Babylonia. civilization in Sumer keep records of 250-230 B.C. The Sieve of commercial Eratosthenes is used to determine transactions on prime numbers. clay tablets. About 79 A.D. The “Antikythera Archives IBM Device,” when set correctly About 1300 The more familiar wire- according to latitude and day of and-bead abacus replaces the Chinese The University Museum, University of Pennsylvania of University Museum, University The the week, gives alternating calculating rods. 29- and 30-day lunar months. 4000 B.C. — 1300 Wednesday, April 17, 2013 1612-1614 John Napier uses the printed decimal point, devises logarithms, and 1622 William Oughtred 1666 In uses numbered sticks, or Napiers Bones, invents the circular England, for calculating. slide rule on the basis Samuel of Napier’s logarithms. Morland produces a mechanical calculator 1623 William (Wilhelm) that can add Schickard designs a and subtract. “calculating clock” with a gear-driven carry mechanism to aid in Museum Computer The multiplication of multi- 1642-1643 Blaise Pascal creates a gear-driven digit numbers. adding machine called the “Pascalene,” the The Computer Museum Computer The first mechanical adding machine. 1600s Wednesday, April 17, 2013 First Computer Bug - 1945 • Relay switches part of computers • Grace Hopper found a moth stuck in a relay responsible for a malfunction • Called it “debugging” a computer Wednesday, April 17, 2013 1832 Babbage and 1834-35 Babbage shifts his focus to Joseph Clement designing the Analytical Engine. produce a portion of the Difference Engine. -
File Compresso Microsoft Compress 2GR Windows Per
~ File temporaneo $$$ File temporaneo ??_ File compresso Microsoft Compress 2GR Windows per visualizzare testo e grafica su PC 386 386 Driver e programmi Dos, Windows 3GR Windows per visualizzare testo e grafica su PC pentium 669 Audio 906 Calcomp plotter A3W MacroMedia Authorware Windows 3.5 ABK AutoBackup Corel Draw. ABR Brush - Adobe Photoshop. ACL Keyboard accelerator Corel Draw 6. ACM Windows system directory file. ACV Driver per compressione audio in OS/2. AD After Dark ADB DataBase HP 100LX oppure Ada language. ADD Adapter Driver - OS/2. ADM AfterDark MultiModule. ADR AfterDark Randomizer. ADS Ada language. AFM Adobe Font Metrics AG4 Access G4 AI Adobe Illustrator AIF Audio IFF (Interchange File Format) ALL Arts and Letters Library. ANI Animated cursor. Ann Archivio ARJ su più dischetti ANS Animazione TheDraw oppure ANSI text. API Application Program Interface - Windows. APP MacroMedia Authorware package. ARC File compresso - arc - PK361.EXE ARJ File compresso - arj ART Ashton-Tate Byline Clipart AS Audio ASC Testo ASCII ASF Active Streaming File oppure HoTMetaL Pro. ASM Animazione TheDraw ASM Assembly Source Code ASP Active Server Page - Microsoft. AST Assistant file - Claris Works. ASX Audio - Windows Media Player 7 ATT AT&T Au Sun Audio file AVI Filmato AVS Intel video capture format. b64 Base 64 (MIME) BAK Copia di un altro file BAS Programma sorgente (Basic, Gwbasic) BAT Istruzioni eseguibili: Batch in DOS BFC Briefcase document - Windows 95. BG Backgammon game. BI Basic include oppure Binary file. - Visual Basic BIN File binario oppure Driver oppure file compresso MacBinary BK Backup copy BK$ Backup file. BLT Wordperfect for DOS. -
Oral History Interview with John Brackett and Doug Ross
An Interview with JOHN BRACKETT AND DOUG ROSS OH 392 Conducted by Mike Mahoney on 7 May 2004 Needham, Massachusetts Charles Babbage Institute Center for the History of Information Processing University of Minnesota, Minneapolis Copyright, Charles Babbage Institute John Brackett and Doug Ross Interview 7 May 2004 Oral History 392 Abstract Doug Ross and John Brackett focus on the background of SofTech and then its entry into the microcomputer software marketplace. They describe their original contact with the University of California at San Diego (UCSD) and licensing the p-System which had been developed there. They discuss the effort required to bring the program to production status and the difficulties in marketing it to the sets of customers. They talk about the transition from 8 bit to 16 bit machines and how that affected their market opportunities. They conclude with a review of the negotiations with IBM and their failure to get p-System to become a primary operating environment. That, and the high performance of Lotus 1-2-3, brought about the demise of the p- System. [John Brackett requested that the following information from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia, be provided as an introduction to this oral history interview: “UCSD p-System or UCSD Pascal System was a portable, highly machine independent operating system based upon UCSD Pascal. The University of California, San Diego Institute for Information Systems developed it in 1978 to provide students with a common operating system that could run on any of the then available microcomputers as well as campus DEC PDP-11 minicomputers. UCSD p- System was one of three operating systems (along with PC-DOS and CP/M-86) that IBM offered for its original IBM PC. -
Marcus Adams
Marcus Adams Room: 105 Margaret Anderson Room: 113 Ian Baronofsky Room: 106 Jeremy Barr-Hyde Room: 200 Melissa Barron Room: 122 Patrick Benton Room: 119 Randy Brandt Room: 215 Evan Brewer Room: 106 Dagen Brock Member of the KansasFest working committee. Resident of Kansas City, MO. Room: N/A John Brooks Room: 220 Stephen Buggie Room: 312 Ken Cefaratti Room: 119 Henry S. Courbis ReActiveMicro.com - Hardware Designer Partners/Authorized Distributor: Ultimate-Micro.com ManilaGear.com GlitchWrks.com ///SHH Systeme PhilosophyOfSound.com Room: 127 NOTE: Things for sale and repair help. Stop by anytime! Roger Denesha Tony Diaz Ivan Drucker Room: 117 Quinn Dunki Room: 111 George Elmore Room: 104 Sean Fahey KansasFest board member. Organizer of the Garage Giveaway (and owner of said garage). Resident of Paola KS. Room: 238/239 Peter Ferrie Room: 104 Alex French Room: 125 Mark Frischknecht Room: 125 Herb Fung Room: 203 Ken Gagne Editor, Juiced.GS Unboxer & Let's Player, YouTube channel Gamebits Occasional podcast guest, Retro Computing Roundtable WordPress enthusiast Boston, Mass. resident Room: 132 Mike Goodell Room: 204 Jay Graham Room: N/A Paul Hagstrom Room: 221 Kurt Hamm Started IT career in High School (1978) working to enter the entire Houston TX phonebook into an IBM System/24. When others were hanging around the mall, I was hanging around Radio Shack. First computer was a Commodore VIC-20. At one time or another held most job descriptions in IT. Now comfortably consulting related to App Dev and Contact Center technologies. Open Source disciple. Vintage computer collector. Most of collection is documented here: https://www.pinterest.com/kurthamm/vintage-computer-coll ection/ Born in Louisiana, but lived most of my life (post-23) in Columbia, SC.