Humble Bundle Announces 'Hacker' Pay-What-You-Want Sale (humblebundle.com)
An anonymous reader writes: Humble Bundle announced a special "pay what you want" sale for four ebooks from No Starch Press, with proceeds going to the Electronic Frontier Foundation (or to the charity of your choice). This "hacker edition" sale includes two relatively new titles from 2015 -- "Automate the Boring Stuff with Python" and Violet Blue's "Smart Girl's Guide to Privacy," as well as "Hacking the Xbox: An Introduction to Reverse Engineering" by Andrew "bunnie" Huang, and "The Linux Command Line".
Hackers who are willing to pay "more than the average" -- currently $14.87 -- can also unlock a set of five more books, which includes "The Maker's Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse: Defend Your Base with Simple Circuits, Arduino, and Raspberry Pi". (This level also includes "Bitcoin for the Befuddled" and "Designing BSD Rootkits: An Introduction to Kernel Hacking".) And at the $15 level -- just 13 cents more -- four additional books are unlocked. "Practical Malware Analysis: The Hands-On Guide to Dissecting Malicious Software" is available at this level, as well as "Hacking: The Art of Exploitation" and "Black Hat Python."
Nice to see they've already sold 28,506 bundles, which are DRM-free and available in PDF, EPUB, and MOBI format. (I still remember Slashdot's 2012 interview with Make magazine's Andrew "bunnie" Huang, who Samzenpus described as "one of the most famous hardware and software hackers in the world.")
Hackers who are willing to pay "more than the average" -- currently $14.87 -- can also unlock a set of five more books, which includes "The Maker's Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse: Defend Your Base with Simple Circuits, Arduino, and Raspberry Pi". (This level also includes "Bitcoin for the Befuddled" and "Designing BSD Rootkits: An Introduction to Kernel Hacking".) And at the $15 level -- just 13 cents more -- four additional books are unlocked. "Practical Malware Analysis: The Hands-On Guide to Dissecting Malicious Software" is available at this level, as well as "Hacking: The Art of Exploitation" and "Black Hat Python."
Nice to see they've already sold 28,506 bundles, which are DRM-free and available in PDF, EPUB, and MOBI format. (I still remember Slashdot's 2012 interview with Make magazine's Andrew "bunnie" Huang, who Samzenpus described as "one of the most famous hardware and software hackers in the world.")
""The Maker's Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse: Defend Your Base with Simple Circuits, Arduino, and Raspberry Pi"."
Step 1: Try to use this book to fight zombies using mass produced consumer electronics starter kits
Step 2: Run screaming as the zombies overwhelm your position
Step 3: Find a real engineer
Step 4: Die to a zombie, unmourned for your uselessness and narcissism.
It is meant for people that want to see themselves as "hackers" or "makers" and as superior to any actual engineer
Well, the important thing is that you've managed to feel superior to them.
Bunny is pretty good though, definitely deserved than engineering PhD for hacking the xbox.
It's cool and he's a very smart guy, but that's not the sort of thing that PhDs are generally awarded for.
I know several people (including myself) that could likely have done it
Talk, as they say, is cheap.
SJW n. One who posts facts.
You are wrong. And this nicely shows you have no idea what you are talking about.
Except you said youself that you and serveral people you know could have done it. In other words, the tools and techniques while tricky are already in existence and so no new research is required.
But what do I know? I've only supervised and examined a few engineering PhDs. It's not all that much of a surprising claim either: I used to be an academic and that's part of the standard duties.
SJW n. One who posts facts.
I've heard this line before, that the Humble Bundle is for charity. "Proceeds go to charity X." Bullshit. They can, if that's what you choose in the checkout section, but by default only 15% of the purchase goes to charity. Many many stores will allow ask for a donation to some charity at checkout, the only extra-charitable thing about the Humble Bundle is that option to divert a greater portion of your purchase to charity if you so choose.
I don't want to denigrate that, that's good, but the Humble Bundle is not for charity. It's a for-profit store with an odd business model.
Not everything gets published.
No, but for a PhD it usually needs to be of publishable quality. It's a rare PhD with no published papers, and it's usually important to find rather easygoing examiners who owe you a favour for those cases.
I rather obviously talked about doing the initial research.
No, you really didn't.
SJW n. One who posts facts.
"Designing BSD Rootkits". Seems cool stuff, but very specialized, indeed!
You've got a 4 digit account, so presumably you're old enough that you're making decent money and you're still pirating books when they're being nearly given away? The authors' time and effort is really worth so little to you?
You want to pirate them, pirate them. But don't come back and boast about it, that's just an asshole move.
Indeed, the book has quite some reasonable stuff in it, but every other sentence is "especially for women, which are often a target ...".