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8 items tagged "joel"
Related tags:
hacks [+],
target [+],
reverse engineering tools [+],
nathan fain [+],
jtag [+],
industrial design students [+],
chaos communication congress [+],
analysis [+],
twitter [+],
tweeting [+],
transparency sheets [+],
time one [+],
stepper motors [+],
solder [+],
robots [+],
reflow oven [+],
reflow [+],
projector [+],
powerglove [+],
peripherals [+],
pcbs [+],
overhead projector [+],
overhead [+],
oven [+],
old bridgeport [+],
nintendo [+],
mill [+],
microcontrollers [+],
little [+],
lighting [+],
led [+],
learning experience [+],
lcd panel [+],
lcd [+],
kickstarter [+],
ghetto [+],
flex sensors [+],
expressions [+],
experience [+],
ewok [+],
ewen [+],
cooking [+],
converting [+],
color temperature [+],
cnc [+],
building [+],
bridgeport mill [+],
bridgeport [+]
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21:55
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SecDocs
Authors:
Nathan Fain Tags:
embedded hardware hacking Event:
Chaos Communication Congress 27th (27C3) 2010 Abstract: Bring your target. Will release a slew of simple tools that explore attack surfaces and explain of how to use: jtag/serial scanners, parallel flash dumper, DePCB board routing analysis. So, crossover from software RE and start hacking/improving like its 1996 again. (full documentation and reference at: http://events.ccc.de/congress/2010/wiki/Embedded_Analysis) "All non-trivial abstractions, to some degree, are leaky." -- Joel on Software This applies just as well to hardware. In the soft center of embedded security are the human abstraction layers between embedded developers, pcb designers and asic designers which expose attack surfaces that are often rudimentary and unmovable. Using a theoretical embedded target we walk through each surface overcoming obfuscation to gain control. Will release a slew of embedded analysis tools, some lolarduino based, some not. These tools are based on frameworks that support Industrial Design students with electronics prototyping. Meaning, with little technical background you can adapt these tools to your needs. The audience is invited to bring their target where contributors will be clustered in the hack center and be available to suggest means of protection or application of analysis techniques in your project.
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21:33
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SecDocs
Authors:
Nathan Fain Tags:
embedded hardware hacking Event:
Chaos Communication Congress 27th (27C3) 2010 Abstract: Bring your target. Will release a slew of simple tools that explore attack surfaces and explain of how to use: jtag/serial scanners, parallel flash dumper, DePCB board routing analysis. So, crossover from software RE and start hacking/improving like its 1996 again. (full documentation and reference at: http://events.ccc.de/congress/2010/wiki/Embedded_Analysis) "All non-trivial abstractions, to some degree, are leaky." -- Joel on Software This applies just as well to hardware. In the soft center of embedded security are the human abstraction layers between embedded developers, pcb designers and asic designers which expose attack surfaces that are often rudimentary and unmovable. Using a theoretical embedded target we walk through each surface overcoming obfuscation to gain control. Will release a slew of embedded analysis tools, some lolarduino based, some not. These tools are based on frameworks that support Industrial Design students with electronics prototyping. Meaning, with little technical background you can adapt these tools to your needs. The audience is invited to bring their target where contributors will be clustered in the hack center and be available to suggest means of protection or application of analysis techniques in your project.
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12:01
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Hack a Day
Apparently, there’s some sort of sporting event being televised this weekend that has been historically used as an excuse to buy a big-screen TV. [Joel] wanted a huge-screen TV on the cheap, so he converted an overhead projector to something he can use with his XBox. Using a bare LCD panel with an overhead projector is [...]
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5:01
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Hack a Day
[Joel] of [Helion Microsystems] is at it again with his USB controlled solder reflow oven. You may remember him from his crazy twitter-enabled Ewok model. Although these two projects are quite different, they both use the HU-320 USB breakout board that he’s in the process of getting funding for via [Pozible], or Australian Kickstarter for [...]
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11:01
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Hack a Day
For most of the past year, [Joel] has been working on converting a manual mill to a CNC mill with the addition of a computer, brackets and stepper motors. He’s put an amazing amount of effort into his project, and the result is awesome and much less expensive than buying and shipping an old Bridgeport mill. [...]
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12:30
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Hack a Day
Tweet Receiving, that is. This Ewok model, named “Ewen the Cheerlight,” is able to rotate its head left and right as well as show expressions. The most interesting feature of this hack, however, is that the little Ewok actually wakes up each time one tweets a “colour” to @cheerlights and lets it’s owner [Joel] know [...]
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11:01
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Hack a Day
[Joel] dug up this hack that he pulled off over ten years ago. It’s inspired by the Nintendo PowerGlove, and uses flex sensors to react to movements of your fingers. The interesting thing is, he built these optical flex sensors himself. He likes to say that this is a ghetto fiber-optic setup. The inlaid diagram [...]
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8:09
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Hack a Day
[Joel] has a very specific color temperature of lighting he wants in his home. So specific, he’s decided to build his own LED lighting to get it. Actually, he’s still searching for that perfect shade of white, but doing so has learned a lot. He initially made some very pretty PCBs, but then found that [...]