I had time to listen to your talk today, Steve. It was very enjoyable. Thanks for posting it.
You have a natural, quick witted talent to speak at these events.
I especially liked your anecdotes about you and your son, Dillon, and you crashing his program with "47". I had a parallel experience with my son, whom I taught how to code and employed in my consulting business. Good times, great memories.
Your comments on bad guys targeting communication protocols between functions in applications was interesting.
GUI programming has encouraged apps which do everything including the kitchen sink. As you mentioned, it gives bad guys places to hide their stuff. My first thought when you discussed that was the change I've observed in Linux over the last 15 years which deals with the decline of single purpose utility apps in favor of GUI wrappers to them, including combinations of them, that actually deceased the functionality of the utilities by limiting the users choices to a few of the most popular switches. Lazy programmers? How many Linux users know how to use the man pages to learn about the various switch options that CLI utilities have? Something as simple as ls or netstat....
You have a natural, quick witted talent to speak at these events.
I especially liked your anecdotes about you and your son, Dillon, and you crashing his program with "47". I had a parallel experience with my son, whom I taught how to code and employed in my consulting business. Good times, great memories.
Your comments on bad guys targeting communication protocols between functions in applications was interesting.
GUI programming has encouraged apps which do everything including the kitchen sink. As you mentioned, it gives bad guys places to hide their stuff. My first thought when you discussed that was the change I've observed in Linux over the last 15 years which deals with the decline of single purpose utility apps in favor of GUI wrappers to them, including combinations of them, that actually deceased the functionality of the utilities by limiting the users choices to a few of the most popular switches. Lazy programmers? How many Linux users know how to use the man pages to learn about the various switch options that CLI utilities have? Something as simple as ls or netstat....
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