I was waiting for you to chime in. Thank you for the help with them that night, I really do appreciate it. It was a huge mess, and it could have gone way different. But luckily there were people there to take care of them.
Originally posted by OM5
So to me I don't necessarily like the idea of a Newbie track. I would much rather see heavy technical tracks that I would personally like to attend. But maybe setting up some other Villages for Newbie's could work. While in the lock pick village I helped out a couple of people that were picking their first locks. In the HHV I helped a couple of people to solder their ports onto their badges, or connect them to a computer for the first time. To me I think the villages are where the community can help to mentor the Newbie's, rather than having specific tracks for them. Things that are more hands on, and can be done in small'ish groups.
Maybe next year the Wireless Village can have a couple of AP's and laptops setup, and show people how to use aircrack or Kismet. The Wall of Sheep this year have short classes on packet sniffing. Maybe a Programming Village could be setup, or a Network Village.
Hell, if someone wants to help me, next year we could setup a small (informal) mentoring session in the Chill Out room, or possibly the Contest area. I may not be adept at programming, but I know a few languages and most of the basics. Or setup some network simulators, or databases, or AP's, HAM radios, reverse engineering, Metasploit, *NIX, etc.. If it turns out well then maybe we come back at DC22 and request space for it. I mean we now have Defcon Kids, what about Defcon Noob's?
Although I do plan on attempting the real CTF next year, if I make that then you're all SOL and on your own
. Myself and another goon actually had to escort someone back to their room due to such an incident so it isn't uncommon to us.
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