Top 10 Password Crackers

Mar11

#1 Cain and Abel : The top password recovery tool for Windows.
UNIX users often smugly assert that the best free security tools support their platform first, and Windows ports are often an afterthought. They are usually right, but Cain & Abel is a glaring exception. This Windows-only password recovery tool handles an enormous variety of tasks. It can recover passwords by sniffing the network, cracking encrypted passwords using Dictionary, Brute-Force and Cryptanalysis attacks, recording VoIP conversations, decoding scrambled passwords, revealing password boxes, uncovering cached passwords and analyzing routing protocols. It is also well documented.
WindowsGUI  Interface

#2 John the Ripper : A powerful, flexible, and fast multi-platform password hash cracker
John the Ripper is a fast password cracker, currently available for many flavors of Unix (11 are officially supported, not counting different architectures), DOS, Win32, BeOS, and OpenVMS. Its primary purpose is to detect weak Unix passwords. It supports several crypt(3) password hash types which are most commonly found on various Unix flavors, as well as Kerberos AFS and Windows NT/2000/XP LM hashes. Several other hash types are added with contributed patches. You will want to start with some word lists, which you can find here, here, or here.
Linux*BSDOS XWindowsCommand-line interface Source code Read the rest of this entry »

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Best Web Toolbar

Feb27

If you ask me, Wibiya takes the cake on this one and leaves it’s competitors far behind. Wibiya is definitely the best Web Tollbar out there that is free in terms of both money and Ads. You can see an example of this toolbar inaction at the bottom of my site.

Wibiya enables blogs to integrate the most exciting services, applications and widgets of their choice into their blog through customized web-based toolbars.
Their platform offers a one-stop solution for integrating, managing and tracking third-party applications. Read the rest of this entry »

Testing Cross Browser Compatibility With Super Preview

Feb27

About 7 years ago, the browser wars were over. Internet Explorer had become the de facto standard, and for a while, there were very few compatibility issues in web page design.

Today’s browser wars make the late 90’s look like a minor skirmish. In addition to Firefox and IE, we’ve got multi-platform versions of Safari, Opera, Chrome, and a wealth of mobile phone browsers. In addition, there are multiple versions of all these browsers, many of which have different rendering idiosyncrasies (I’m talkin’ about you, IE6/7/8). Read the rest of this entry »

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