I am very new to the world of hacking... Could you all give me a hand understanding...(aka suggested reading and helpful tips for a newbie.) Thanx in advance Stephen
I am very new to the world of hacking... Could you all give me a hand understanding...(aka suggested reading and helpful tips for a newbie.)
Thanx in advance
Stephen
Stephen, I would strongly suggest _Hackers_ by Steven Levy (ISBN: 0-440-13405-6). After you have read this book, you will have a very good understanding of what true hacking is (versus all of the new "meanings.") After that, perhaps the _Hacker Crackdown_ by Bruce Sterling (?). Then after that, you pretty much choose your own course... If you want to get into MSDOS programming, you will get lots of interrupt listings, disassemblers, etc. If you want to get into UNIX programming, you will get lots of UNIX books, recompile your kernel a few times, etc. :) Hacking is a very personal experience for me, and usually I'm hacking. The term is defined as "learning by trial and error." You can hack a car if you get the manual, sit down, and just start fiddling until you get it right. Incidentally, psychology backs up hacking as a good method for learning, because operant conditioning (where when you are on the right track, you start getting positive responses [rewards], so you go in that direction, and when you eventually get it right, you will remember how you got there) is known to be a strong teaching tool. For example, your program isn't working, but when you add a particular statement to the code, it starts to behave, but the results aren't right. So you follow in that vein of thinking and soon enough the whole thing is fixed (aside from new undocumented features.) I thought that psychology would come in handy sometime... Chael -- Chael Hall nowhere@bsu-cs.bsu.edu, 00CCHALL@BSUVC.BSU.EDU (317) 285-3648 after 5 pm EST
Not that I'm exactly of godlike hacking proportions, but these are obvious to me.... patience, persistance, obsessiveness, curiousity also, there's no such thing as a dumb question, but it's not terribly difficult to ask questions in the wrong place and,thereby, waste other people's time and piss them off. Your question isn't terribly appropriate to the cypherpunks list and it's so amazingly general that you won't get anything but a general answer. the most important thing about being a hacker is working with other hackers. Despite common misperceptions, hacking is a social thing. stig
participants (3)
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nowhere@bsu-cs.bsu.edu
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stig@netcom.com
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vanam@shadow.ksu.ksu.edu