39C3 - Cracking open what makes Apple's Low-Latency WiFi so fast
https://media.ccc.de/v/39c3-cracking-... This talk presents Apple's link-layer protocol Low-Latency WiFi and how it achieves its real-time capabilities to enable Continuity features like Sidecar Display and Continuity Camera. We make more kernel logging available on iOS and build a log aggregator that combines and aligns system- and network-level log sources from iOS and macOS. Apple's Continuity features make up a big part of their walled garden. From AirDrop and Handoff to AirPlay, they all connect macOS and iOS devices wirelessly. In recent years, security researchers have opened up several of these features showing that the Apple ecosystem is technically compatible with third-party devices. In this talk, we present the internal workings of Low-Latency WiFi (LLW) – Apple's link-layer protocol for several real-time Continuity features like Continuity Camera and Sidecar Display. We talk about the concepts behind LLW, how it achieves its low-latency requirement and how we got there in the reverse engineering process. We also present the tooling we built to enable more kernel-level tracing and logging on iOS through a reimplementation of cctool from macOS and the source code of trace that was buried deep inside of Apple’s open-source repository system_cmds. We build a log aggregator that combines various kernel- and user-space traces, log messages and pcap files from both iOS and macOS into a single file and finally investigate the network stack on Apple platforms that is implemented in both user- and kernel space. There we find interesting configuration values of LLW that make it the go-to link-layer protocol for Apple's proprietary real-time Continuity applications. Henri Jäger https://events.ccc.de/congress/2025/h... #39c3 #Hardware Licensed to the public under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/b...

39C3 - Hacking washing machines

39C3 - Building hardware - easier than ever - harder than it should be

Creating your own Streamline Blade from scratch in KiCAD | KiCAD #9

39C3 - Asahi Linux - Porting Linux to Apple Silicon

39C3 - Liberating Bluetooth on the ESP32
![[DCTF23] q3k: Breaking iPod Nano security for fun and Linux](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/WQtt7O5OXe0/hqdefault.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEjCNACELwBSFryq4qpAxUIARUAAAAAGAElAADIQj0AgKJDeAE=&rs=AOn4CLCemIca2X1prNdHyBNQLoWpr4xTHA)
[DCTF23] q3k: Breaking iPod Nano security for fun and Linux

Something is jamming GPS over Europe. Here's what we found

Inside Anthropic, the $965 Billion AI Juggernaut | The Circuit

Exposing The Solid State Donut Battery. It's Over.

39C3 - Verlorene Domains, offene Türen - Was alte Behördendomains verraten

Zig 2026: No-AI Policy, $670K Foundation, Left GitHub & Why Zig Isn’t 1.0 - Andrew Kelley Explains

Are we stuck with the same Desktop UX forever? | Ubuntu Summit 25.10

I Tried to Make a Better Fan

39C3 - Don’t look up: There are sensitive internal links in the clear on GEO satellites

researcher accidentally finds 0-day affecting his entire internet service provider

Sarah Paine - Why Putin and Xi can't escape geography

j0nas: De-Spotify Yourself - Warum Du von $Streamingdienst weg willst und wie/wohin

This is why more and more projects are leaving GitHub!

39C3 - Security Nightmares

