Wednesday, 27 August 2008

The Last Hope Talks

The Last Hope

I have spent the last few days listening to some of the presentations and talks given at the Hacker On Planet Earth conference (HOPE) This year's event was probably going to be the last due to plans to demolish the venue in New York, hence the event tag "The Last HOPE" however it seems those plans may have changed.

The speakers are wide ranging, with interesting and thought provoking topics.

Some highlights are the talks by Kevin Mitnick, a 3 hour marathon talk by Steven Rambam about privacy and the lack of it and the ominous threats posed by new technologies such as Google, the iPhone and social networking sites, well worth a listen. Also Renderman's presentation "How Do I Pwn Thee? Let Me Count The Ways" highlights the security dangers of mobile technology.

Of special interest to me was Travis Goodspeed's "Introduction to MCU Firmware Analysis and Modification with MSP430static" the slides and information are available from Travis' website. In this talk Travis gives a wonderful account of the basic principals of reverse engineering.

All the talks are available here for free download in low and high quality versions.

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Saturday, 2 August 2008

SamKnows releases first broadband preformance report

Map of monitors

I posted back in May about ISP watchers SamKnows.com who launched a bid to discover the truth about the state of UK broadband by recruiting volunteers to install a monitoring device on their network, to collect performance data (the geographical distribution is shown above).

They have now released their first report, a 40 page pdf which can be downloaded here.

On page 2 of the report is the main summary

In the majority of metrics there was little discernable difference between most
ISPs;
  • Zen Internet offered the fewest failures across all metrics;
  • Virgin Media’s cable services and Be/O2’s services provided a consistently low latency throughout, whilst Virgin.Net (Virgin’s ADSL service) performed poorly.
  • BT provided the fastest throughput when measured as a percentage of implied line speed (an estimate of the potential maximum speed of the line)
  • Be/O2 and Virgin Media produced the greatest raw throughput (in megabits per second), which can likely be attributed to the nature of their products.
  • Virgin Media’s cable throughput remained consistent on their 2, 4 and 10Mbps products, but was quite variable on their 20Mbps product.
  • Testing highlighted the use of traffic shaping in the networks of BT and PlusNet, which resulted in certain classes of traffic slowing significantly during peak hours.
Being on the Virginmedia XL (20 Mbps package) I can confirm their results are pretty much what I have experienced.

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