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Digital Fortress by Dan Brown
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DIGITAL FORTRESS by Dan Brown

by Dan Brown

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9,023128137 (3.13)33
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St. Martin's Press (2004), Paperback

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Member recommendations

  1. TAir recommends The Enemy by Desmond Bagley
  2. Anonymous user recommends Binary Justice by David Kessler, "Computers and hacking, but also there are some less obvious stylistic similarities, most notably the clever use of sudden surprises at the end of chapters (see more) and an underlying "Big Issue" - in this case racist jury tampering."
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English (114)  Dutch (4)  Italian (2)  Spanish (2)  Portuguese (1)  Swedish (1)  German (1)  Portuguese (Portugal) (1)  French (1)  Norwegian (1)  All languages (128)
Showing 1-5 of 114 (next | show all)
An exciting thriller, marred by spurious technical detail and poor research. ( )
  hankreardon | Dec 30, 2009 |
An exciting thriller, difficult to put down. Mystery about breaking a code to save the NSA database. Since the book was written in 1998, some of the "state-of-the art" technology is now commonplace. But the story is still exciting, and full of surprises through the end. A fun, entertaining read. ( )
  kerrwjpk | Nov 27, 2009 |
Good thing I bought my copy at the Thrift store. On page 23 you find out the Commander has a thing for his golden girl. No surprise when he sends her professor boyfriend on a mission he plans will be the death of him. Page 85 graphically gives away the pass-key. The only reason to finish the book is to find out what the boyfriend meant by "without wax." Could have Googled for that. The book was copywrited in 1998 but must have been written a good deal earlier if Mr. Brown thought people didn't know about the NSA or use better security than this on their own job. When was the last time you were allowed to use a password that wasn't a minimum of 6 alpha-numeric characters with a combination of upper and lower case letters? Who hires someone that hates your agency and then lets him come in on the weekend unsupervised? This plot is way to simple for someone who devoured all the Sherlock Holmes books in grade school instead of the easy readers they call YA books now. ( )
1 vote glitrbug | Nov 14, 2009 |
What a load of cobblers…NSA expert fails to see connection between N Dakota and ... ( )
  EricPMagnuson | Nov 11, 2009 |
Awful. ( )
  mcandre | Nov 1, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 114 (next | show all)
A crescendo of murder, infernos, and explosions... Brown's skill... will rivet cyber-minded readers.
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For my parents . . . my mentors and heroes
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It is said that in death, all things become clear; Ensei Tankado now knew it was true.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Wikipedia in English (2)

Digital Fortress

File:DigitalFortress.jpg

Book description
Kad se neuništivi stroj za dešifriranje u vlasništvu Nacionalne sigurnosne agencije susretne sa tajanstvenim kodom kojeg ne može razbiti, Agencija poziva u pomoć svoju glavnu kriptografkinju Susan Fletcher, nadarenu i prelijepu matematičarku. Ono što će ona otkriti, potrest će centre moći. NSA iznenada postaje žrtvom ucjene, ne oružane, već putem koda koji je toliko kompleksan da njegovo objavljivanje može onesposobiti čitavu obavještajnu službu SAD-a.

Uvučena u opasan vrtlog mračnih tajni i podlih laži, Susan Fletcher bori se za spas Agencije u koju vjeruje. Izdana od svih, polako shvaća kako se ne bori samo za svoju domovinu, već i za svoj vlastiti život, a na kraju i za život čovjeka kojeg voli.

Amazon.com (ISBN 0312995423, Mass Market Paperback)

In most thrillers, "hardware" consists of big guns, airplanes, military vehicles, and weapons that make things explode. Dan Brown has written a thriller for those of us who like our hardware with disc drives and who rate our heroes by big brainpower rather than big firepower. It's an Internet user's spy novel where the good guys and bad guys struggle over secrets somewhat more intellectual than just where the secret formula is hidden--they have to gain understanding of what the secret formula actually is.

In this case, the secret formula is a new means of encryption, capable of changing the balance of international power. Part of the fun is that the book takes the reader along into an understanding of encryption technologies. You'll find yourself better understanding the political battles over such real-life technologies as the Clipper Chip and PGP (Pretty Good Privacy) software even though the book looks at the issues through the eyes of fiction.

Although there's enough globehopping in this book for James Bond, the real battleground is cyberspace, because that's where the "bomb" (or rather, the new encryption algorithm) will explode. Yes, there are a few flaws in the plot if you look too closely, but the cleverness and the sheer fun of it all more than make up for them. There are enough twists and turns to keep you guessing and a lot of high, gee-whiz-level information about encryption, code breaking, and the role they play in international politics. Set aside the whole afternoon and evening for it and have finger food on hand for supper--you may want to read this one straight through.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:05 -0400)

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