Posted: August 30th, 2009 | Author: Matt | Filed under: mac | Tags: mac, review, snow leopard | No Comments »
There seems to be a big hubbub about the new release of Mac OS X 10.6, code named “Snow Leopard”. Rumours flying around the Interweb about anti-virus, Exchange integration and all that. I will be covering none of that. I will give you my impressions of the OS from my now rather brief interactions with it.
Installation.
After spending the R329 at the rather useless but very easy to spend millions iStore at Gateway, you get a very skinny, but as with everything Apple, very pretty DVD case with some gumph about the awesome that is Snow Leopard, a couple of stickers and the install DVD.
The install itself was a breeze. After running through the fix permissions stuff in Onyx as suggested by the sloping fore-headed man at the aforementioned iStore the actual install too roughly an hour. After which you reboot into the Snow Leopard desktop. I must mention that I only had 9Gig left on my 13″ MacBook so the fact that the install went through without a hitch is a big green tick to Apple and their techies…
The desktop itself shows now major changes to the previous iteration of Mac OS X. It does seem to be a bit snappier. Finder opens that little bit quicker and yes, I do have around 6Gig more space than when I started. That’s a big plus in my books.
Quicktime has got a major work over and it now looks much snazzier. Which is, as we all know, a major plus for everyone, because we all use Quicktime every day
Day to day stuff
On a daily basis I use the following to get through my day…
Microsoft Office 2008
Tunnelblick
Things
Path Finder
Truecrypt
Vmware (and this was the important one)
I could go through the list of everything I use on a daily basis, but that would make for a very boring blog post to be honest. I have checked with the above list and it all seems to be working fine. I am working through my SANS course with the Tunnelblick, I’ve sent through a couple of emails and Vmware seems to be behaving itself. Big plus there…
So what doesn’t work ?
On my system ? Nothing doesn’t work. There were a couple of little things like the iStat Menus which I used, but that’s really not a show stopper. If anything, my machine is a little snappier, a little quicker off the mark but I have absolutely no technical proof of this. Sorry.
It’s the little things
Terminal. Terminal has a little button on the top right that looks like a little split screen. Click that little bad boy and you get…a split terminal screen. Awesome !!! For people like me it’s a very cool little add-on. It’ll be interesting to see how this works over the next few days.
So yeah. So far so good. Snow Leopard isn’t a major overhaul of the OS. But it was never meant to be. It was a fine tuning of the OS. A refining process. And from my point of view, it seems to have worked. I’ll keep you posted on how it goes over the course of the week. No doubt I will be very vocal on Twitter if anything goes awry….
Posted: August 26th, 2009 | Author: Matt | Filed under: Education, InfoSec | Tags: Education, review, SANS | No Comments »
SANS a French preposition meaning “without”
I’m probably just going to end up sounding like a completely besotted fan boy who’s looking for some free stuff or perhaps a night on the town with some older lady in a satin dress. What I’m really trying to do is let people know about the SANS training. A lot of people are probably trying to decide whether or not to spend the rather large amounts of money required to go on SANS training. Hopefully this will answer a few questions and clear up any doubt. I am not affiliated with SANS, they aren’t giving me free stuff and no one from SANS is going to take me out for a night on the town. In a nutshell, you’re going to get an unbiased opinion.
I am currently doing the SANS SEC560 – Network Penetration Testing and Ethical Hacking course via the SANS @Home / vLive. This means I have to wake up at 1am because silly me forgot to check the times that it runs in the States versus the times it is here in merry old South Africa. Good times.
Classes
You sign into Elluminate via Java Web Start which is a little scary considering the recent Apple / Java stuff. What you get is a paned “browser” type setup with the main focus on the slides they will be showing that evening in the class. There is another with a list of all the people in the class with a section to enter your questions. When the class runs you are able to ask questions / post opinions etc. to the entire class and have them answered in real time. Very cool. The instructors talk through the slides, giving opinions, “what out for this” and other such goodness. There was even a case the one night when Bryce Galbraith opened and shared his terminal window with the class just to show us something and drive the point home. I find this way of learning so much better than the usual book worming as I battle to just read through books or slides and then work through exercises.
Exercises
Yes, there are exercises, LOTS of them. You are given VPN access into “The Lab” where SANS have setup various machines for you to scan, exploit and generally play around with. Very cool. No reading about “oh, here this is what a scan looks like”, you actually run the scans yourself from a virtual image with all the tools required already installed. Did I say “image” ? Yes, you get a pre-configured Vmware image to run with all the various tools already installed and ready to run. No messing around trying to get stuff working 5 minutes before class. Oh, and the access to the “test” servers ? Awesome. Fire up the VPN, and run through the exercises in real time. Learn by doing…
Instructors
The current class is being run by Jon Strand, Ed Skoudis and Galbraith. I’m not going to say any more on these guys. Let’s just say they all engage the class completely. Questions from the class are answered promptly and accurately. If they can’t be answered an email is sent and the answer is given either at the end of class or in the next one. I’ve sent Ed and John a couple of emails both about the course material and a couple of “off topic” queries and both times I had an answer in my Inbox the next day.
So yeah, in conclusion, if you’re thinking about taking a SANS course or trying to decide between SANS and perhaps another provider, go with SANS. You won’t be disappointed. I for one cannot wait until I can go on some more training. Probably sometime in the year 2025 because of the Rand/Dollar problem, but we can only hope.
Thanks Ed, John and Bryce. You guys rock.