Media Summary: A hacked car that could kill you should be more worrying than a thousand lightbulbs taking Facebook offline. University of ... How did early computers like EDSAC deal with programs? Professor Brailsford on the code David Wheeler wrote to make ... Traceroute is a standard networking tool, but can it be used to recreate all those film scenes where a 'trace' is put on a signal?

Finding Hardware Bugs Computerphile - Detailed Analysis & Overview

A hacked car that could kill you should be more worrying than a thousand lightbulbs taking Facebook offline. University of ... How did early computers like EDSAC deal with programs? Professor Brailsford on the code David Wheeler wrote to make ... Traceroute is a standard networking tool, but can it be used to recreate all those film scenes where a 'trace' is put on a signal? The PDP1 was a groundbreaking computer from the 1950's - but where does it fit into computing history and how would you use it ... Enigma is known as the WWII cipher, but how does it hold up in 2021? Dr Mike Pound implemented it and shows how it stacks up ... RISC processors kept things simple, but when do you need to make your

Many of us use Location Services & GPS on smartphones but Cell Phone Companies have been able to track us for a long time. Knuth talked about "Literate Programming" over forty years ago, but what does it mean to have code that a developer and a client ... Wanacrypt works super fast and even when you're offline. Dr Pound explains how hybrid ransomware systems work. Original ... Spectre refers to a whole family of potential weaknesses of which Meltdown is just one. Dr Steve Bagley talks about CPU ... Hobbyist hackers and programmers use Arduinos extensively - but what is an Arduino made of? James Fowkes from Nottingham ... The Port Smash exploits Hyperthreading and timings to work out what other programs are doing. Dr Steve Bagley looks at how.

Why can't floating point do money? It's a brilliant solution for speed of calculations in the computer, but how and why does moving ... Prehistoric WiFi? Converting bits into audio and broadcasting them via radio - Dr Aaron Jackson demos packet radio. Secure Copy is flawed, and the flaw goes back over 30 years. Dr Steve Bagley explains just how 'secure' it is. A $5 computer - where's the catch? Well, there doesn't seem to be one. Dr Steve "Heartbleed" Bagley explains the Raspberry Pi ...

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Finding Hardware Bugs - Computerphile
Bug in Binary Search - Computerphile
Internet of Things Problems - Computerphile
Shellshock Code & the Bash Bug - Computerphile
Bootstrapping EDSAC: Initial Orders - Computerphile
How Traceroute Works (Building a Movie Scene 'Trace' Map) - Computerphile
Hacking on the PDP1 Raspberry Pi Emulator - Computerphile
Cracking Enigma in 2021 - Computerphile
Hardware vs Software & Digital Video - Computerphile
How Cell Phones Reveal Your Location - Computerphile
Human Readable Code - Computerphile
How WanaCrypt Encrypts Your Files - Computerphile
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Finding Hardware Bugs - Computerphile

Finding Hardware Bugs - Computerphile

When you're setting your

Bug in Binary Search - Computerphile

Bug in Binary Search - Computerphile

Mike talks through a binary search

Internet of Things Problems - Computerphile

Internet of Things Problems - Computerphile

A hacked car that could kill you should be more worrying than a thousand lightbulbs taking Facebook offline. University of ...

Shellshock Code & the Bash Bug - Computerphile

Shellshock Code & the Bash Bug - Computerphile

Audible free book: http://www.audible.com/

Bootstrapping EDSAC: Initial Orders - Computerphile

Bootstrapping EDSAC: Initial Orders - Computerphile

How did early computers like EDSAC deal with programs? Professor Brailsford on the code David Wheeler wrote to make ...

How Traceroute Works (Building a Movie Scene 'Trace' Map) - Computerphile

How Traceroute Works (Building a Movie Scene 'Trace' Map) - Computerphile

Traceroute is a standard networking tool, but can it be used to recreate all those film scenes where a 'trace' is put on a signal?

Hacking on the PDP1 Raspberry Pi Emulator - Computerphile

Hacking on the PDP1 Raspberry Pi Emulator - Computerphile

The PDP1 was a groundbreaking computer from the 1950's - but where does it fit into computing history and how would you use it ...

Cracking Enigma in 2021 - Computerphile

Cracking Enigma in 2021 - Computerphile

Enigma is known as the WWII cipher, but how does it hold up in 2021? Dr Mike Pound implemented it and shows how it stacks up ...

Hardware vs Software & Digital Video - Computerphile

Hardware vs Software & Digital Video - Computerphile

RISC processors kept things simple, but when do you need to make your

How Cell Phones Reveal Your Location - Computerphile

How Cell Phones Reveal Your Location - Computerphile

Many of us use Location Services & GPS on smartphones but Cell Phone Companies have been able to track us for a long time.

Human Readable Code - Computerphile

Human Readable Code - Computerphile

Knuth talked about "Literate Programming" over forty years ago, but what does it mean to have code that a developer and a client ...

How WanaCrypt Encrypts Your Files - Computerphile

How WanaCrypt Encrypts Your Files - Computerphile

Wanacrypt works super fast and even when you're offline. Dr Pound explains how hybrid ransomware systems work. Original ...

Spectre & Meltdown - Computerphile

Spectre & Meltdown - Computerphile

Spectre refers to a whole family of potential weaknesses of which Meltdown is just one. Dr Steve Bagley talks about CPU ...

Arduino Hardware - Computerphile

Arduino Hardware - Computerphile

Hobbyist hackers and programmers use Arduinos extensively - but what is an Arduino made of? James Fowkes from Nottingham ...

What's Behind Port Smash? - Computerphile

What's Behind Port Smash? - Computerphile

The Port Smash exploits Hyperthreading and timings to work out what other programs are doing. Dr Steve Bagley looks at how.

Floating Point Numbers - Computerphile

Floating Point Numbers - Computerphile

Why can't floating point do money? It's a brilliant solution for speed of calculations in the computer, but how and why does moving ...

Packet Radio (Post Apocalyptic Internet?) - Computerphile

Packet Radio (Post Apocalyptic Internet?) - Computerphile

Prehistoric WiFi? Converting bits into audio and broadcasting them via radio - Dr Aaron Jackson demos packet radio.

Secure Copy Vulnerability (SCP) - Computerphile

Secure Copy Vulnerability (SCP) - Computerphile

Secure Copy is flawed, and the flaw goes back over 30 years. Dr Steve Bagley explains just how 'secure' it is.

Raspberry Pi Zero - the $5 Computer - Computerphile

Raspberry Pi Zero - the $5 Computer - Computerphile

A $5 computer - where's the catch? Well, there doesn't seem to be one. Dr Steve "Heartbleed" Bagley explains the Raspberry Pi ...