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10:30
@Kamiccolo I also agree on those formatting suggestions
@Kamiccolo yeah, which reminds of the best C implementation of JSON parser: zserge.com/jsmn.html
@Kamiccolo I'm following Ton Rosendaal on twitter, so I already knew that, but thanks ;)
@PeterVaro awwww... :}
still progress. Having in mind some AMD video cards which just sucked on Linux,,,
 
3 hours later…
13:33
helloc all;
13:44
helloc @deckard;
 
1 hour later…
user3079266
15:02
helloc all;
15:16
helloc @Mints97;
user3079266
'sup?
helloc @Mints97;
how are your exams going?
user3079266
@deckard finished with 'em, thanks =)
that's nice (:
15:48
@Mints97 freeeeeedom than? :} at least for a while...
 
1 hour later…
16:49
helloc all;

I wanted to ask this on SO but got frightened of downvotes :) as this might have been asked lots of time. Though, Google shows lots of trash when I try to search. How do we promote (advertise, etc) a computer programm?

Suppose a man has written a tool which doesn't have GUI and wants the world to know about this. How to accomplish this goal?
I'm asking this here as this is about me and my tool which's written in C. I found no chats tagged 'application advertising' :)
hello @ForceBru;
Hello world @ForceBru
I'm not really sure, is your application OpenSource?
What else can you share about this util, is it free? open-source? who would be the target audience?
@deckard, a part of it is OpenSource. I want to make it OpenSource. But the other part is not.
17:00
Either way, IMHO you should promote it to people that can make use of it. So, locate that people and where they gather and attack them at night to ensure lots of casualties.
@DrorK., yes, it's completely free. The target audience will maybe contain some programmers or penetration-testers.
No, really. I don't know what is your application about but you should determine who can consider it useful and look for forums, IRC channels and that sort of things.
=}
promote it here, then
hahaha
after all, we are certainly programmers. Drop us a link or sth
Oh, no problem. __everyone please visit the following link__
[Woodpecker hash Bruteforce](http://brute.heliohost.org)
What happened with Markdown? Still forgetting sometimes how to format links.
probably you don't want to advertise it with everyone please visit the following link
Well, you said I should advertise - so did I
17:05
Useful feedback, typo in the description: Working as a penteration tester
That's not mine, that's iPhone's autocorrection's
yes, but I think the advertisement should be meaningful, not please visit this.
@ForceBru It doesn't support linux, or I've failed reading?
That's not the real description: the real one is on the link I've shared
@DrorK., the code does, but I haven't tried to compile it on Linux. Do the executables have any extension?
@ForceBru Yes man, but when you are promoting something you have to motivate the people to click on what you are sharing, that's what meaningful titles are all about.
17:09
@ForceBru I could be wrong, but I don't think your target audience is Windows-oriented, linux seems to me much more natural
About sharing: where do we share these links and descriptions?
@ForceBru "password is not sent to the server, but a hash is"
I thought Mac OS was instead of Linux. I just don't have any Linux machine and no experience working on Linux
that is where 1 min of googling got me
17:12
@ForceBru Is there any kind of standard that follows this statement that I'm unaware of?
@DrorK., what's wrong here? Yes, sometimes plain-text passwords are sent.
@DrorK. Your love for standards still amazes me =)
@ForceBru This statement is pretty much misleading
@deckard Heh, good one :)
well, I've to go now. Let's call it a day.
goto home;
@ForceBru First of all, you describe the providing a hash upon authentication as something common, which obviously it's not. But at the same breathe you describe simple password hashing as something common, which once again the opposite is more likely
There are much more systems today that would salt the password, than ones that would use a hash for client-authentication
Unless you mix client-authentication, and session authentication, which are not the same thing. And even then, it's by far more common to use a unique token for session authentication, which once again would render the hash, even if it wasn't salted, pretty much useless
"these are not strings" ... is a bit misleading, because these are strings, and the comment about may contain non-printable digits, is also false, because these are not digits and it may not contain anything non-printable
I hope you're taking my comments as something you should look into for improving
17:33
@DrorK., thank you very much for your comments, I was writing this myself without consulting any human being: just some sites.
 
3 hours later…
20:29
@ForceBru GitHub nowadays is like social network for OpenSource projects...
and why only 32bit Windows version?

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