Người Bạn Đầu Tiên Bởi Nhiều Tác Giả
Người Bạn Đầu Tiên tải về miễn phí cuốn sách
Trên trang này chúng tôi đã thu thập cho bạn tất cả các thông tin về Người Bạn Đầu Tiên sách, nhặt những cuốn sách, bài đánh giá, đánh giá và liên kết tương tự để tải về miễn phí, những độc giả đọc sách dễ chịu. Người Bạn Đầu Tiên Dự án Hỗ trợ Văn học Thiếu nhi Việt Nam - Đan Mạch là món quà tuyệt vời mà chính phủ Đan Mạch và Hội Nhà văn Đan Mạch dành tặng trẻ em Việt Nam.Mục tiêu của Dự án là nâng cao năng lực sáng tác cho đội ngũ những người viết và vẽ cho thiếu nhi tại Việt Nam; mở cánh cửa giao lưu giữa các nhà văn, họa sĩ Việt Nam với các nhà văn, họa sĩ Đan Mạch thông qua các cuộc hội thảo và các cuộc Vận động sáng tác hằng năm nhằm tạo ra những tác phẩm mới có tính sáng tạo phục vụ bạn đọc nhỏ tuổi.Tranh truyện là mảng sách được Dự án đặc biệt quan tâm. Bởi đây là thể loại được các em nhỏ yêu thích, phù hợp với cảm nhận trực quan nhưng cũng phát huy mạnh mẽ trí tưởng tượng của bạn đọc nhỏ tuổi thông qua những câu chuyện sinh động cùng đường nét, sắc màu lung linh của tranh minh họa. Trong nhiều năm qua, các cuộc Vận động sáng tác không chỉ thu hút các nhà văn ở thể loại truyện ngắn mà còn thu hút rất nhiều họa sĩ trẻ tài năng với những tác phẩm tranh truyện có nội dung và ý tưởng mới lạ cùng cách trình bày độc đáo.Tập sách Người Bạn Đầu Tiên gồm những tác phẩm xuất sắc được tuyển chọn từ hơn 50 tác phẩm đã đoạt giải. Các câu chuyện đều giản dị, gần gũi song cũng chứa đựng những yếu tố kì ảo mà vẫn thấm đượm tình yêu thương nhân ái. Các nhân vật khi là người thật, khi là những nhân vật đồng thoại gần gũi như con ong, chú kiến, khi lại là những bông hoa, giọt nước. tất cả đều được các nhà văn, hoạ sĩ thổi hồn khiến chúng có thê kể hoặc trò chuyện với bạn đọc về cuộc sống và thế giới xung quanh các em. Bạn đọc sẽ tìm thấy nhiều thú vị khi đọc tập sách này. Xem Thêm Nội Dung Cổng thông tin - Thư viện Sách hướng dẫn hy vọng bạn thích nội dung được biên tập viên của chúng tôi thu thập trên Người Bạn Đầu Tiên và bạn nhìn lại chúng tôi, cũng như tư vấn cho bạn bè của bạn. Và theo truyền thống - chỉ có những cuốn sách hay cho bạn, những độc giả thân mến của chúng ta.
Người Bạn Đầu Tiên chi tiết
- Nhà xuất bản: Nhà Xuất Bản Kim Đồng
- Ngày xuất bản:
- Che: Bìa mềm
- Ngôn ngữ:
- ISBN-10: 2520317884929
- ISBN-13:
- Kích thước: 18.5x20.5 cm
- Cân nặng:
- Trang:
- Loạt:
- Cấp:
- Tuổi tác:
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3.9 mb. | tải về |
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3.4 mb. | tải về |
Người Bạn Đầu Tiên từ các nguồn khác
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Người Bạn Đầu Tiên tải về trong djvu |
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3.2 mb. | tải về EPub |
Người Bạn Đầu Tiên Sách lại
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rensheng
仁圣 张 rensheng — For most people, computers are magic. Which is to say, they are technology sufficiently advanced to the point of mystification. I include myself in this camp, for despite my comfort with computers and my fluency in programming, a great deal of mystery still surrounds them. With the emergence of the Internet into the public sphere and the rise of the Web, computers and the phone system are now fundamentally intertwined, and vast swathes of our infrastructure are dependent on them. The dangers of cyberwarfare are very real. At the same time, however, it's important that we don't exaggerate or misrepresent this threat. Movies and television sensationalize the abilities and proclivities of hackers for the sake of drama and entertainment. Real hackers are quite different, and their motives and actions are as diverse and varied as the people they hack. Real hacking is independent of platform and technology; it's often more of a case of appealing to the weakest element in the system: the human. Ghost in the Wires is the autobiography of Kevin Mitnick, “the world's most wanted hacker”. His is a fascinating, even bizarre tale of the convergence of law enforcement, ego, and addiction. Thanks to Mitnick’s impressive abilities, equally impressive capacity for self-delusion and self-denial, and the media’s tendency to think the worst, exploits and escapades that start as harmless fun result in a years-long manhunt and nearly a decade of jail time. Mitnick's gateway into hacking is “phone phreaking”, unauthorized access to the phone company’s systems. This was in the days before the Web, before even personal computers, when computing itself involved entering programs line-by-line into computer memory and watching the read-outs on a printer, not a screen. It’s an era utterly alien to someone of my generation, let alone younger readers—and I love reading about how people interacted with computers at that stage. As computers and phones become more advanced, so too does Mitnick. He explains how he acquires the ability to clone cell phone numbers, and how he uses space in dormant accounts on university and company servers to store source code he steals from companies like Sun, Novell, and Motorola. He obtains access to the IRS and DMV records, which later becomes instrumental as he creates false identities and goes on the run. Mitnick keeps the structure of the book strictly chronological, with just enough foreshadowing to whet our appetites in anticipation of future events. However, some common themes quickly emerge. After his first few brushes with law enforcement over his hacking, Mitnick attempts to “straighten out” and quit, only to relapse time and again. In this sense, hacking is an addiction—it’s a challenge that provides a cognitive reward. No matter how hard he tries to give it up, he returns to it. This inability to rein himself in, even when he recognizes the dangers and the possibility of overreaching, is one of the reasons he eventually gets caught and goes to jail. Mitnick also faces a revolving door of betrayal. Best friends and confidantes turn coat and rat him out to get lighter punishments; people he thought he could rely on turn against him. I sympathize. However, these accounts are necessarily one-sided, and I get the sense from reading between the lines that there was a lot about Mitnick as a person that contributed to these changes of heart. Ghost in the Wires is a hefty book, especially as a paperback, and the pace is very slow. Mitnick enjoys teasing out every detail of his latest hack or discovery. Yet I never tired of hearing about it; I seldom wanted to put this book down. I just wanted to know what happened next: what was the next hack, the next run-in with the law, the next problem Mitnick had to overcome? Even before he becomes a fugitive, there is a sense of danger always around the corner. Though he spends a lot of time celebrating his ability to outwit and evade security employees from the telephone companies, he also gives due credit to those people who manage to outwit him. Once in a while, a technician or sysadmin catches on and boots him out. My reading pace is different for every book, but I literally did not want to stop reading this, stealing every possible opportunity to read as much as I could each day. There is just never a dull moment in the book. It’s also truly terrifying to see how quickly rumours become exaggerated and become part of the legal record. Mitnick stresses throughout the book that he never hacked for profit or out of malice. For him, it was merely an exercise in ego. That doesn’t excuse the actions, but it does mean that charges amounting to terrorism are unjust. The ignorance of the law enforcement and judicial officials involved in this case is staggering. The overreactions—not letting Mitnick have any access to a phone for national security reasons—are a sobering reminder of how easy it is to mislead people who are less informed. When those people are in positions of power, they can abuse or misuse that power unwittingly, under the impression they are acting in the interests of public safety. Perhaps the most surprising revelation in this book isn’t a technical one at all. Rather, Mitnick accomplishes some of his most daring hacks through social engineering. It’s incredible how willing people are to help him cirumvent their own company’s security procedures. With a little research and some guile, Mitnick poses as an employee from another office, tells a plausible story, and gets remote access or other information that people shouldn’t be so ready to divulge. The weakest link in our cybersecurity is not the technology. It’s us. The trusting operator, the cheerful colleague … these are all parts of being human and having positive interactions every day. But the best, most secure systems are worthless if all you need to do is sweet-talk someone into reseting an account’s password. Mitnick’s approach still works today. Just ask Mat Honan, who had his Amazon and Apple accounts hacked through social-engineering of customer support representatives, and from there, the hackers disassembled the rest of his digital existence. Ghost in the Wires is that sweet spot of books about technology. It’s accessible to everyone. At times Mitnick’s terminology definitely becomes a little technical and specialized—I don’t know enough about how our phone system works to pretend to follow his explanations of how he tricks the system into rerouting calls and letting him listen into private conversations. But that didn’t affect my enjoyment of the book or my ability to follow what he was achieving. It also has a strong social message. Mitnick’s relationship with hacking is an addiction just as damaging to his life as an addiction to drugs or alcohol. Moreover, the book is a warning that unless we make sure people in positions of power are better-educated about the capabilities of technology, we run the risk of innocent lives being ruined by misinformed authorities. The majority of Mitnick’s tale takes place in the 1980s and 1990s, in the infancy of the World Wide Web. There was no Facebook or Twitter, no Amazon or Google. Now we spend more and more of our lives online. Mitnick might have been the world’s first “most wanted hacker”, but I doubt he will be the last. And we’re all going to have to get a little more clued-in, or we will be in for a rough time.
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_hris_harples_esign
Chris Sharples _hris_harples_esign — Recurring people play scapegoats for secret agencies. They became a clog in the wheel of the secret service during this new age set story. These common individuals flee amok catching up somehow in controversy leading to powerful governmental consequences. The technology in this near future view compared to ours would look like our own perceiving it by a general point of view. This story is interesting. Its political viewpoint becomes a part of the story adding interest in the normal collective opinions of the FBI. An investigated crime is committed against the public security during an extreme surveillance of a secret agent and the higher-ups need answers or want it covered up. A crust of time spans between the FBI and lives of innocent people who from their everyday activity go to hiding in fear of the FBI. They’ve learned of secrets and add some realizations about the FBI. The FBI begins to exhaust their powers investigating these innocent people. Only the FBI becomes pitted against their one self as their own terrorists in a baffling case that becomes a battle over an oppressive investigation spree. Important FBI agents become eliminated while trying to apprehend the innocent group of people. The innocent eventually struggle with their learning of other uncovered secrets. After this they learn of a greater mistake than efforts can undo in time. The awareness of it to stopping it take on some definite shape. To succeed in its undoing the people continue running away from the FBI. Uncunningly they come into play and they join in the fight against the uncovered tyranny or selfishness, secrets of a kind whatever it is, it becomes the sensation of invasion of these innocent. What they never knew they now learn to hate it. They somehow learn of the oncoming world catastrophe but they do not know how to stop even that. It may have been determined already set into motion before their involvement to bring the end.
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_arlox240
Carlos Serrano _arlox240 — Cute book that's a perfect board book style. Musical simple rhymes on one side of the 2-page spread, cartoonish, but cute pictures of multicultural babies on the other. Some board books try to condense longer books, or contain too many words of text, or have pictures that are too complicated for this smaller format. This book falls into none of those traps. Good book for a young baby!
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