It aligns quite well with the study (in diagrams and commented assembly) of x86 in POC || GTFO starting in pocorgtfo04.pdf chapter 3 provided by Shikhin Sethi.
The Nature article and notebooks from a few years back are still pretty good for demos, though everything has updated since then , especially iPython -> Jupyter.
I do agree. That's actually part of why I called out the language: maintaining balance (as well as not cussing in front of the wrong people) are critical skills for security professionals and sorely lacking in many would-be candidates.
His educational advice was good but the attitude he shares via diction is unhelpful at best especially to folks who do not _yet_ have an awesome job in infosec.
This mirror of a Purism blog post to his personal blog looks pretty interesting but I'm having trouble accessing it on homelinux or puri.sm domains due to reputation.
_The Week_ is quite good (US or UK). They have people read many of the things you don't have time to (including _The Economist_ :) ) and pull highlights from them across a broad range of topics.
Yes, but that was consumer / education market gear first (iMac) as I recall.
More or less back on topic ... I bought a HP Probook for my on-the-road studies/work last cycle because I needed a portable that I could do _work_ with and repairability, matte screen, mouse buttons, VGA, HDMI, and whole lot of other things were much more important to me than width or mass or shiny. It came with Windows and it's well supported.
I would like to get another 17" macbook pro someday (mine is pretty old and 80% retired), and this move and the messaging around it suggests that Apple doesn't care to make one. It's no surprise, but it still stings a bit, and as noted else where it is breathtakingly clumsy for their remaining mac business (as is that press conference).
https://corkami.github.io/
In particular he works on/with the PoC||GTFO team and is responsible for the MD5 collision cover art in a past issue:
https://github.com/angea/pocorgtfo
For SHA-1 (and others) you might find more at his github project:
https://github.com/corkami/collisions
hth,
adric