Monday 1 September 2014

Your Android

Android is a mobile operating system (OS)
based on the Linux kernel and currently
developed by Google. With a user interface
based on direct manipulation, Android is
designed primarily for touchscreen mobile
devices such as smartphones and tablet
computers, with specialized user interfaces
for televisions (Android TV), cars (Android
Auto), and wrist watches (Android Wear). The
OS uses touch inputs that loosely correspond
to real-world actions, like swiping, tapping,
pinching, and reverse pinching to manipulate
on-screen objects, and a virtual keyboard.
Despite being primarily designed for
touchscreen input, it also has been used in
game consoles, digital cameras, and other
electronics.
Alpha (1.0)
Beta (1.1)
Cupcake (1.5)
Donut (1.6)
Eclair (2.0–2.1)
Froyo (2.2–2.2.3)
Gingerbread (2.3–2.3.7)
Honeycomb (3.0–3.2.6)
Ice Cream Sandwich (4.0–4.0.4)
Jelly Bean (4.1–4.3.1)
KitKat (4.4–4.4.4)
As of 2011, Android has the largest installed
base of any mobile OS and as of 2013, its
devices also sell more than Windows, iOS,
and Mac OS devices combined
As of July 2013 the Google Play store has
had over 1 million Android apps published,
and over 50 billion apps downloaded.
A developer survey conducted in April–May
2013 found that 71% of mobile developers
develop for Android.
At Google I/O 2014, the company revealed
that there were over 1 billion active monthly
Android users (that have been active for 30
days), up from 538 million in June 2013.
Android's source code is released by Google
under open source licenses, although most
Android devices ultimately ship with a
combination of open source and proprietary
software

Magic cookie

A magic cookie, or just cookie for short, is a
token or short packet of data passed between
communicating programs, where the data is
typically not meaningful to the recipient
program. The contents are opaque and not
usually interpreted until the recipient passes
the cookie data back to the sender or
perhaps another program at a later time. The
cookie is often used like a ticket – to identify
a particular event or transaction
HTTP cookie
A cookie, also known as an HTTP cookie, web
cookie, or browser cookie, is a small piece of
data sent from a website and stored in a
user's web browser while the user is
browsing that website. Every time the user
loads the website, the browser sends the
cookie back to the server to notify the
website of the user's previous activity
Cookies were designed to be a reliable
mechanism for websites to remember
stateful information (such as items in a
shopping cart) or to record the user's
browsing activity (including clicking
particular buttons, logging in, or recording
which pages were visited by the user as far
back as months or years ago).

30 + Hacking tools Vulnerability Scanners

1. SAINT
2. Nipper
3. Secunia PSI
4. Retina
5. MBSA
6. QualysGuard
7. GFI LanGuard
8. Nexpose
9. Core Impact
10. OpenVAS
11. Nessus
Password Cracker
12. Brutus
13. Wfuzz
14. RainbowCrack
15. SolarWinds
16. L0phtCrack
17. Medusa
18. PwDump 6
19. AirSnort
20. THC Hydra
21. John the Ripper
22. Cain and Abel
23. Aircrack
24. Ophcrack
Anonymous Tools
25. Hotspot Shield
26. AIO Secret Maker
Game Hacking Tools
27. Art Money
28. 3D Fx Zone
29. Game Booster
30. Speed Gear
31. Cheat Engine

Sunday 24 August 2014

Command Prompt Short Keys

F1: Pastes the last executed command
(character by character)
F2: Pastes the last executed command (up to
the entered character)
F3: Pastes the last executed command
F4: Deletes current prompt text up to the
entered character
F5: Pastes recently executed commands
(does not cycle)
F6: Pastes ^Z to the prompt
F7: Displays a selectable list of previously
executed commands
F8: Pastes recently executed commands
(cycles)
F9: Asks for the number of the command
from the F7 list to paste

SAAS ( Software as a service )

Software as a service is a software licensing
and delivery model in which software is
licensed on a subscription basis and is
centrally hosted. It is sometimes referred to
as "on-demand software". SaaS is typically
accessed by users using a thin client via a
web browser. SaaS has become a common
delivery model for many business
applications, including office & messaging
software, DBMS software, management
software, CAD software, development
software, gamification, virtualization,
accounting, collaboration, customer
relationship management (CRM), management
information systems (MIS), enterprise
resource planning (ERP), invoicing, human
resource management (HRM), content
management (CM) and service desk
management. SaaS has been incorporated
into the strategy of all leading enterprise
software companies. One of the biggest
selling points for these companies is the
potential to reduce IT support costs by
outsourcing hardware and software
maintenance and support to the SaaS
provider.
According to a Gartner Group estimate, SaaS
sales in 2010 reached $10 billion, and were
projected to increase to $12.1bn in 2011, up
20.7% from 2010. Gartner Group estimates
that SaaS revenue will be more than double
its 2010 numbers by 2015 and reach a
projected $21.3bn. Customer relationship
management (CRM) continues to be the
largest market for SaaS. SaaS revenue within
the CRM market was forecast to reach
$3.8bn in 2011, up from $3.2bn in 2010.
The term "software as a service" (SaaS) is
considered to be part of the nomenclature of
cloud computing, along with infrastructure as
a service (IaaS), platform as a service (PaaS),
desktop as a service (DaaS), backend as a
service (BaaS), and information technology
management as a service (ITMaaS).

10+ linux OS for hacking-

1. Kali Linux - http://www.kali.org/
2. BackBox - http://www.backbox.org/
3. DEFT - http://www.deftlinux.net/
4. Live Hacking OS - https://
www.livehacking.com/
5. Samurai Web Security Framework - http://
sourceforge.net/projects/samurai/
6. Network Security Tool Kit - http://
sourceforge.net/projects/nst/
7. Parrot-sec Forensic OS – http://
www.parrotsec.org/index.php/Main_Page
8. Bugtraq - http://bugtraq-team.com/
9. Nodezero - http://www.nodezero-lin
ux.org/
10. Pentoo - http://www.pentoo.ch/
11. Gnacktrack - http://www.gnacktrack.c
o.uk/