Topic:
"All about the RPC, LRPC, ALPC and LPC in your PC"
Alex Ionescu |
Alex is coauthor of Windows Internals 5th edition. He teaches
Windows OS internals to Microsoft employees and other organizations
worldwide.
He is the founder of Winsider Seminars & Solutions Inc., specializing
in low-level system software for administrators and developers. Alex was
the lead kernel developer for ReactOS, an open source clone of Windows
XP/2003 written from scratch, where he wrote most of the NT-based
kernel.
Alex is also very active in the security research community, discovering and reporting several vulnerabilities related to the Windows kernel and presenting talks at conferences such as Blackhat and Recon.
Alex's experience in OS design and kernel coding dates back to his early adolescence when he first played with John Fine's educational OS, Kernel, and Boot Loader code. Since then, he has been active in the area of NT kernel development, offering help and advice for driver developers, as well as in the NT reverse engineering and security field, where he has published a number of articles and source code, such as documentation for the Linux NTFS project, extensive papers on the Visual Basic Metadata and Pseudo-code format, and NTFS Structures and Data Streams. In the last three years, he has also contributed to patches and development in two major commercially used operating system kernels.
Alex is also very active in the security research community, discovering and reporting several vulnerabilities related to the Windows kernel and presenting talks at conferences such as Blackhat and Recon.
Alex's experience in OS design and kernel coding dates back to his early adolescence when he first played with John Fine's educational OS, Kernel, and Boot Loader code. Since then, he has been active in the area of NT kernel development, offering help and advice for driver developers, as well as in the NT reverse engineering and security field, where he has published a number of articles and source code, such as documentation for the Linux NTFS project, extensive papers on the Visual Basic Metadata and Pseudo-code format, and NTFS Structures and Data Streams. In the last three years, he has also contributed to patches and development in two major commercially used operating system kernels.
For more information on Alex, see his
web site and blog.
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