I viewed the image.dd file in Cluster view, which shows Here's the version of ProDiscover I used: I started ProDiscover Basic and loaded the image.dd file. Here's the MD5 hash of the unzipped image.dd raw file: I downloaded it, verified the MD5, and unzipped it.
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I am using Windows 7 in a Fusion virtual machine, I am using a floppy disk image from honeynet:
In FAT12, cluster numbers start with 2, the 0th cluster being the boot information and the first cluster is directory structure. The first issue is problem with reading first two clusters in FAT12 partitions.
We have reviewed and tested the issues you reported. I don't completely understand the explanation-it doesn't I notified Chris Brown privately, and he responded with Be that as it may they are a fact of life and in any case it was fun learning visual C++.ProDiscover Problems ProDiscover Problems Video Summarizing the Problem
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My main concern over Windows/DOS is not that they are making a few people very very rich but rather that the source code is not available for scrutiny and there may well be built in trojan horses. This is not because I am a Windows/DOS fan but rather that the products need to reach a wider audience. It is also available as a Windows and DOS version ready to run. This is available as a Linux version for interested parties to experiment with: jphs-0.3.tgz – compressed tar signature A waterfall in a forest is probably ideal. A cloudless blue sky over a snow covered ski paradise is bad. Of course some images are much better than others when used a host file – plenty of fine detail is good. Above 15% the effects begin to become visible to the naked eye. As the insertion percentage increases the statistical nature of the jpeg coefficients differs from “normal” to the extent that it raises suspicion. Given a typical visual image, a low insertion rate (under 5%) and the absence of the original file, it is not possible to conclude with any worthwhile certainty that the host file contains inserted data. The design objective was not simply to hide a file but rather to do this in such a way that it is impossible to prove that the host file contains a hidden file. There are lots of versions of similar programs available on the internet but JPHIDE and JPSEEK are rather special. JPHIDE and JPSEEK are programs which allow you to hide a file in a jpeg visual image.