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Amnesia Remembered: Reverse Engineering a Digital Artifact [Pehme köide]

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Our modern culture is increasingly expressed in the form of digital artifacts, yet archaeology is in its infancy when it comes to researching and understanding them. The study and reverse engineering of digital artifacts is no longer the exclusive domain of computer scientists. Presented by way of analogy to the process of archaeological fieldwork familiar to readers, the 1986 Electronic Arts game Amnesia is used as a vehicle to explain the procedure and thought process required to reverse engineer a digital artifact. As a go-to reference to learn how to begin studying the digital, Amnesia is shown to be a multi-layered artifact with a complex backstory; through it, topics in data compression, copy protection, memory management, and programming languages are covered.

Arvustused

Highly recommended. All readers Choice





"This is a fascinating exploration of a single digital artefact. It reminds the reader that digital things are still physical and from those physical fluctuations representing ones and zeros the book walks the reader through the process of reconstructing what the code actually was, what it did, why it did it, and why it matters. Shawn Graham, Carleton University

List of Figures

List of Tables

Preface



Part I:Pre-Excavation



Introduction



Chapter
1. Reconnaissance

Chapter
2. Evaluation

Chapter
3. Strategy and Research Questions



Part II: Excavation



Chapter
4. Fragments

Chapter
5. Publisher Logo

Chapter
6. Text Encoding

Chapter
7. Interpreter

Chapter
8. Text Encoding, Revisited

Chapter
9. Parser

Chapter
10. Finding Locations

Chapter
11. Copy Protection



Part III: Post-Excavation



Chapter
12. Analysis



Conclusion



Index
John Aycock is an associate professor in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Calgary, Canada. He is the author of Retrogame Archeology: Exploring Old Computer Games (Springer, 2016). His research interests include studying the implementation of "retro" computer games and technology, which he has been doing in collaboration with archaeologists and others.