tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4080617372940068027.post8284571596020637065..comments2024-03-13T01:32:25.097-04:00Comments on Journey Into Incident Response: PFIC 2011 ReviewCorey Harrellhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15008629321023489214noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4080617372940068027.post-15740333132241583342011-11-16T17:07:01.191-05:002011-11-16T17:07:01.191-05:00Another cool thing at PFIC is that the agenda iden...Another cool thing at PFIC is that the agenda identifies the vendor sessions since it says vendor showcase. I was surprise to find most sessions focused on the process or technique then showed how free tools can be used to implement it.Corey Harrellhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15008629321023489214noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4080617372940068027.post-30751848084253093152011-11-16T14:35:49.135-05:002011-11-16T14:35:49.135-05:00Great Post... It's good to see a review of a...Great Post... It's good to see a review of a Conference like this. To be honest I never considered a Paraben Conf. just because I assumed it would be Vendor specific. Not that that is bad, it just if you don't use Paraben tools then it's a waste of time (and $$). It seems from your writeup that you only encountered a few Vendor classes and could avoid them at will if needed. <br /><br />I assume that the PFIC, being a fairly new conference, is growing and content probably gets better each year. <br /><br />Good info.. <br /> Thanks<br />RobRobhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05553397674741084481noreply@blogger.com