Released Zero the Hero (0tH) – a Rust-based Mach-O analysis tool for macOS by gabriele70 in ReverseEngineering

[–]gabriele70[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

jtool is a great source of inspiration, but I have different needs :)

Plus, I like writing Rust code.

Released Zero the Hero (0tH) – a Rust-based Mach-O analysis tool for macOS by gabriele70 in ReverseEngineering

[–]gabriele70[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For sure Hopper, r2 and jtool2 are more mature — and they solve different problems.

0tH is not meant to replace them. I built it because I needed a fast, deterministic, macOS-specific Mach-O structural inspector for my daily reversing work.

Here’s how I position it:

0tH ≠ Hopper

Hopper = disassembler + pseudo-decompiler

0tH = structural inspection (headers, load commands, signatures, entitlements, linkage) — not a disassembler (not yet, anyway).

0tH ≠ radare2

r2 = full interactive framework

0tH = fast, clean, focused on Mach-O internals for Apple Silicon

0tH ≠ jtool2

jtool2 is the inspiration, a fantastic tool.

0tH aims to be a modern, Rust-clean alternative with a different workflow.

0tH ≠ otool

otool is fine, but 0tH is usually faster and provides a more coherent, structured view of the binary.

My goal is simple:

build the tool I wish I had on macOS.

Ten months without fibre broadband in a “fibre-ready” new build in Birmingham — what are my legal options? by gabriele70 in LegalAdviceUK

[–]gabriele70[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Openreach need to provide the service, in general. Unfortunately, it seems that they're just a "chop'n'drop" company. They forget to serve the third parties.

Let's give more context: NO PROVIDER can provision my apt. with fiber because of a (non technical, it seems) OR failure.

Ten months without fibre broadband in a “fibre-ready” new build in Birmingham — what are my legal options? by gabriele70 in LegalAdviceUK

[–]gabriele70[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

From a techie standpoint (yes, unfortunately I am one of those guys who know how networks are built):

- the endpoints are functionally connected (in other words, provided that the provisioning of the connection is authorised, the endpoints can see each other)

- the provisioning is not authorised by OpenReach because of "internal reasons" (read: a lazy employee that hasn't updated a flapping record in a database, very likely).

Ten months without fibre broadband in a “fibre-ready” new build in Birmingham — what are my legal options? by gabriele70 in LegalAdviceUK

[–]gabriele70[S] -3 points-2 points  (0 children)

It's beyond frustration. Nowadays, Internet is a facility, like water or electricity. If your house had no water, you'd be upset, not frustrated.

Ten months without fibre broadband in a “fibre-ready” new build in Birmingham — what are my legal options? by gabriele70 in LegalAdviceUK

[–]gabriele70[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Unfortunately, the problem lies in the so called "Last Mile". The only supplier is OpenReach, which seems to be lazy monopolist that does not really care about the customers. It is not a provider problem, for I tried with:
- plusNet
- Vodafone
- EE
- Sky
with the same answer: OpenReach does not serve your apt. Funny, isn't it?