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Sopwith | David L. Clark edit / delete
I remember playing this on RM Nimbus machines at school. It's now available under the GPL!
to games msdos retrocomputing sopwith source ... on 13 September 2015
Recreating an RCA COSMAC computer that never made it to market.
to cdp1802 cosmac electronics micro rca retrocomputing ... on 13 September 2015
The microphone arrangements used for the 2014 Proms, described in some detail. They had several completely independent arrangements for different media.
to bbc microphone proms recordings ... on 13 September 2015
Compression Made Easy edit / delete
A good overview of audio compressors and the common control schemes.
to audio compression mixing recording ... on 13 September 2015
Game by Game Podcast - Information Hub edit / delete
I've been listening to The Intellivisionaries for a while, which is very well done; this is a list of similar podcasts.
to games podcast retrocomputing ... on 13 September 2015
Moonstick Co. - manual visual calculators for astronomy, timekeeping, and computation edit / delete
Makers of a range of slide rules and related devices, with copious explanation. Neat!
to astronomy maths mechanica slide-rule ... on 29 June 2015
A Revelatory Look into the Organ Registration of 'AWSoP' edit / delete
The drawbar/percussion settings for "A Whiter Shade of Pale".
to drawbar hammond music organ procol-harum ... on 29 June 2015
Hammond Tonewheel Organs edit / delete
Modifying a Hammond M-100 series spinet organ to behave more like a B-3.
to electronics hammond leslie organ retrotech tonewheel ... on 29 June 2015
HammondWiki - Home Page edit / delete
A very comprehensive wiki about playing and maintaining Hammond tonewheel organs. Useful reference even for those of us who're just playing a software simulation...
to electronics hammond instrument music organ retrotech tonewheel ... on 29 June 2015
Blind Return Oriented Programming (BROP) edit / delete
"Evolving" an ROP attack against an automatically-restarting server. This works by finding two gadgets whose behaviour you can distinguish (e.g. crashing vs. hanging), then constructing ROP chains that will have different behaviour depending on how many items are popped, then trying lots of addresses and combinations of arguments to find gadgets. Neat!
to buffer-overflow exploit rop security ... on 29 June 2015
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tasty by Adam Sampson.