by Roy Rapoport, Brian Moyles, Jim Cistaro, and Corey Bertram We’ve blogged a lot about how we use Java here at Netflix, but Python’s footprint in our environment continues to increase. In honor of our sponsorship of PyCon, we wanted to highlight our many uses of Python at Netflix. Developers at Netflix have the freedom to choose the technologies best suited for the job. More and more, developers
Brandon Quakkelaar - Mar 10, 2013 In the back of my mind I've always been intrigued by writing an application that can retrieve web pages over HTTP. It's a fairly simple thing to do. We have a myriad of web browsers that do it for us. But there is just something about writing an application that operates independently of a browser and reaches out to touch the internet that I find fun and intriguin
Welcome. My name is Stavros. After many years of desktop programming, I recently decided to give web development a try. These are the results of my journey so far... Project Windstorm - The demo When I tried to think of a project suitable for learning JavaScript, a terrain flyover demo came to mind. I've worked with terrain rendering in OpenGL before and using WebGL inside a Canvas element kept me
The Nuit du Hack CTF 2013 Quals round was taking place yesterday. As usual, I’ll be posting a few writeups about fun exercises and/or solutions from this CTF. If you want more, my teammate w4kfu should be posting some writeups as well on his blog soon. TL;DR: auth(''.__class__.__class__('haxx2',(),{'__getitem__': lambda self,*a:'','__len__':(lambda l:l('function')( l('code')( 1,1,6,67,'d\x01\x00i\
A Python version (almost a port) of ProPublica's TableFu View the Project on GitHub eyeseast/python-tablefu Download ZIP File Download TAR Ball View On GitHub Python TableFu is a tool for manipulating spreadsheet-like tables in Python. It began as a Python implementation of ProPublica's TableFu, though new methods have been added. TableFu allows filtering, faceting and manipulating of data. Going
Introduction In one of my courses at McMaster University - Computer Networks and Security - the professor gave a challenge in class. The first person to crack a crypt() hash would get a 3% bonus on their final grade, and the first person to crack a md5crypt()-based hash would get a 7% bonus on their final grade. I cracked the crypt() password while the class was still going, by using John the Ripp
Microchips - are indeed can be considered a black box - as long as it's working you normally don't look inside. But what if you want to? Today we'll show how to "open" chips and what's inside. WARNING! All operations with concentrated (and especially hot) acids are extremely dangerous. Only trained persons should work with them using required protective equipment (acid-prof gloves, protection glas
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