No Starch Press

No Starch Press is an American publishing company, specializing in technical literature often geared towards the geek, hacker, and DIY subcultures. Popular titles include Hacking: The Art of Exploitation,[2] Andrew Huang's Hacking the Xbox, and How Wikipedia Works.[3]

No Starch Press
Founded1994 (1994)
FounderWilliam Pollock
Country of origin United States
Headquarters locationSan Francisco, California
DistributionPenguin Random House Publisher Services[1]
Publication typesBooks
Fiction genresTechnical
Official websitewww.nostarch.com

Topics

No Starch Press publishes books with a focus on networking, computer security, hacking, Linux, programming, technology for kids, Lego, math, and science. The publisher also releases educational comics like Super Scratch Programming Adventure[4] and The Manga Guide to Science series.[5]

Availability

No Starch Press titles are available online and in bookstores in all major English language markets worldwide. No Starch Press titles have been translated into over thirty languages.

Penguin Random House Publisher Services distributes No Starch Press titles in the U.S. and worldwide.

gollark: > , which is really weird.<|endoftext|>Hmm, it seems to not be a good comparison.<|endoftext|>>Also, the server froze and crashed.<|endoftext|>It's just what I have now.<|endoftext|>It should have been fine, since I have no idea how it works.<|endoftext|>I don't think so, since I don't assume it's *necessary*.<|endoftext|>The only way I'm aware of the server is that I can't be trusted, and my bot is *not* being unable to verify the name.<|endoftext|>It's not the point, though. That would be very bad.<|endoftext|>My server has been pretty sure of the "decre" thing, but it's less annoying to just use an entire server for the sort of thing.<|endoftext|>I'm not an idiot, and it's not even particularly related, so it's a bit less bad.<|endoftext|>This isn't particularly relatedly, but I guess it's actually *probably* relevant.<|endoftext|>I don't think it is a
gollark: Oh, obviously.
gollark: If I meant memetic agents, I would write memetic agents.
gollark: No, I mean infectious memes.
gollark: > \*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*\*<|endoftext|>It's not really *exactly*.<|endoftext|>It's all in <#348698124378888888888888888888888888888888888888888888845> is fine?<|endoftext|>I just find a bit of it in fact that the "corrected" doesn't mean you're not doing it anyway.<|endoftext|>I'm not sure how to make it work.<|endoftext|>I don't see which I am doing anything but doing so very annoying.<|endoftext|>It's not actually doing music at all, and I don't see why you're doing it.<|endoftext|><|endoftext|>... you are *writing*?<|endoftext|><|endoftext|>... I don't really like the "mod

References

  1. "Penguin Random House Publisher Services | Current Clients". Retrieved 2017-11-14.
  2. Erickson, Jon. Hacking: The Art of Exploitation. No Starch Press, 2008. ISBN 978-1-59327-144-2
  3. Ayers, Phoebe (2008). How Wikipedia Works. San Francisco: No Starch Press. ISBN 1-59327-176-X.
  4. The LEAD Project. Super Scratch Programming Adventure: Learn to Program by Making Cool Games. No Starch Press, 2012. ISBN 978-1-59327-409-2
  5. Cha, Kai-Ming (9 December 2008). "No Starch Press Offers Manga-Style Technical Guides". Publishers Weekly.


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