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Difference between revisions of "Books"
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=== Non-Programming === | === Non-Programming === | ||
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+ | ; [[Wikipedia:Underground_(Suelette_Dreyfus_book) |Underground]] by Drefuss, Suelette (1997) | ||
+ | : Covers the hacker culutre in Melbourne, Australia during the late 80s/early 90s. Much of the research was done by Julian "Mendax" Assange well before his Wikileaks days. [http://www.underground-book.net/download.php3 Available online for free]. | ||
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+ | ; [[Wikipedia:Parmy_Olson#We_Are_Anonymous |We Are Anonymous]] by Olson, Parmy (2012) | ||
+ | : History of LulzSec, with the Stratfor and HBGary hacks and a brief history of [[4chan]]. Audiobook available. | ||
= Magazines = | = Magazines = |
Revision as of 12:51, 25 March 2016
Books
Distributed in a variety of formats such as .pdf and .mobi, books are wads of text intended for educational or entertainment purposes.
Audiobooks (sometimes called Talking Books) are audio files in which a well spoken person reads the book to you, similar to a podcast.
Once upon a time books were distributed physically using dead trees (similar to toilet paper). This is rare now.
Fiction
Non-Fiction
Programming
See: Programming resources#God-tier_books
Non-Programming
- Underground by Drefuss, Suelette (1997)
- Covers the hacker culutre in Melbourne, Australia during the late 80s/early 90s. Much of the research was done by Julian "Mendax" Assange well before his Wikileaks days. Available online for free.
- We Are Anonymous by Olson, Parmy (2012)
- History of LulzSec, with the Stratfor and HBGary hacks and a brief history of 4chan. Audiobook available.
Magazines
Magazines were similar to books, but lighter. They often comprised of many short articles which spanned only a page or two out of a 50-100 page magazine. They were distributed weekly or monthly and would often include sections such as "news" and "letters to the editor". It was possible to "subscribe" to a magazine, where a subscriber would pay for a year's worth of magazines in advance and have them home delivered.
Magazines were replaced by websites and comment sections on the web. They have died a very slow death, relying on technological illiterates to continue buying them.
Some magazines still exist in an online-only format, but tend to update daily rather than weekly/monthy and are "magazines" in name only.