March 6: Ilfak: "I haven't checked out Ghidra yet, but IDA and Hex-Rays are better" https://twitter.com/ilfak/status/1103267200801083392 … March 21: Ilfak: *suddenly starts giving away free educational licenses* https://www.hex-rays.com/products/ida/educ.shtml … Hex-Rays isn't feeling the Ghidra pressure, not at all, nope.
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Replying to @marcan42
Microsoft built their empire on mediocre software pushed thru educational institutions. Cannot blame Hex Rays for trying the same approach with cutting edge software.
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Too little, too late.
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Replying to @devnoname120 @marcan42
How dramatic. Does NSA offer any kind of warranty or support with Ghidra ?
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Replying to @io_r_us @devnoname120
Yeah, about that warranty thing.pic.twitter.com/yieaYXu0dq
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As for "cutting edge", call me when Hex-Rays supports decompiling MIPS, AVR, 8051, PIC, 68k, and also any other architecture you write an ISA description for :-) Seriously, this whole "it's better because it's commercial and costs 5 figures" nonsense is getting old.
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As for support, several Ghidra GitHub issues have been closed as fixed by NSA employees already (pending release of the next version). So yes, they do offer support!
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Replying to @marcan42 @devnoname120
ah, so the code base *is* changing, how unexpected.
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