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<title>Show user publications Cuong1412 - Full Software Downloads - Download For All</title>
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<language>ru</language>
<description>Show user publications Cuong1412 - Full Software Downloads - Download For All</description>
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<title>Advanced CORBA(R) Programming with C++</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<div align="center"><img src="http://i212.photobucket.com/albums/cc94/Dl4All/album3/Advanced-CORBA-Programming-with-C.jpg" style="border: none;" alt='Advanced CORBA(R) Programming with C++' title='Advanced CORBA(R) Programming with C++' /></div><br /><div align="center"><b>Addison-Wesley Professional | 1120 pages | English</b></div><br />Written for the experienced C++ developer facing real-world CORBA for the first time, Advanced CORBA Programming with C++ is a useful guide to today’s most popular standard for distributed computing.<br /><br />After a quick tour of CORBA basics, the authors jump right in with a minimum skeleton application written in C++. From there, they provide truly extensive coverage of CORBA IDL, along with many tips for using IDL data types in C++. (They cover advanced features such as any, TypeCode, and DynAny later in the book.).<br /><br />Next the book unveils its sample application–a distributed climate control system. Material on the Portable Object Adapter and the Object Life Cycle, including garbage collection strategies, rounds out this section. Additional chapters examine the details of Object Request Brokers (ORBs), including Internet Inter-ORB Protocol (IIOP), repositories, and binding. The authors also present CORBA’s built-in APIs for Naming, Trading, and Event Services (including asynchronous event handling), which is most useful as reference material.<br /><br />Final sections examine strategies for better scalability, including multithreading and optimizing network traffic for CORBA objects. The authors provide numerous short excerpts of C++ code, though it must be said that much of this book is reference material rather than a hands-on programming tutorial. –Richard Dragan]]></description>
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<dc:creator>Cuong1412</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Fri, 07 Nov 2008 09:02:07 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Exploiting Software: How to Break Code</title>
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<description><![CDATA[<div align="center"><img src="http://i212.photobucket.com/albums/cc94/Dl4All/album3/Exploiting-Software-How-to-Break-Co.jpg" style="border: none;" alt='Exploiting Software: How to Break Code' title='Exploiting Software: How to Break Code' /></div><br /><b><div align="center">Addison-Wesley Professional 2/27/2004 | 512 Pages | English | ISBN-10: 0201786958 | 4.6 MB</div></b><br />Computing hardware would have no value without software; software tells hardware what to do. Software therefore must have special authority within computing systems. All computer security problems stem from that fact, and Exploiting Software: How to Break Code shows you how to design your software so it’s as resistant as possible to attack.<br /><br />Sure, everything’s phrased in offensive terms (as instructions for the attacker, that is), but this book has at least as much value in showing designers what sorts of attacks their software will face (the book could serve as a checklist for part of a pre-release testing regimen). Plus, the clever reverse-engineering strategies that Greg Hoglund and Gary McGraw teach will be useful in many legitimate software projects. Consider this a recipe book for mayhem, or a compendium of lessons learned by others. It depends on your situation.<br /><br />PHP programmers will take issue with the authors’ blanket assessment of their language (”PHP is a study in bad security”), much of which seems based on older versions of the language that had some risky default behaviors–but those programmers will also double-check their servers’ register_globals settings. Users of insufficiently cracked Microsoft and Oracle products will worry about the detailed attack instructions this book contains. Responsible programmers and administrators will appreciate what amounts to documentation of attackers’ rootkits for various operating systems, and will raise their eyebrows at the techniques for writing malicious code to unused EEPROM chips in target systems. –David Wall]]></description>
<category><![CDATA[E-Books]]></category>
<dc:creator>Cuong1412</dc:creator>
<pubDate>Fri, 07 Nov 2008 08:53:51 -0500</pubDate>
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