General
The article documents an effort to back up the firmware of an older Lego NXT brick and explores multiple approaches to extract or execute code on the device. It covers hardware-level interfaces (JTAG, bootloaders), VM IO-Maps, and a memory-exploitation path that targets a function pointer inside the firmware to achieve native code execution, culminating in a method to dump the firmware. The piece emphasizes the security implications of embedded devices, discusses research ethics, and provides a detailed narrative of exploration and learning rather than a production-ready exploit guide.
A practical exploration of carrier-grade NAT (CGNAT) and IPv6 deployment, focusing on how bandwidth quality and reachability affect home and small-business networks. The post expla…
A practical guide exploring CGNAT, bandwidth concepts, and tunneling solutions to expose home services behind CGNAT. It covers CGNAT basics, the difference between capacity and hea…