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bored369

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  1. I think it forces you to use the mouse after a couple wrong pins and then after a few more it forces you to enter the password. So no.
  2. You can try looking up the model number in an FCC search (or i think there is an fcc number on it) if you are in the us or the device is also sold there. That should give you the exact frequency. Car remotes can be on a few different frequencies; mine is on or around 315MHz I think. Either way if you are near that frequency you should be able to see something when it's actually transmitting (pushing a button) it's normally pretty quick but you should see something even if you don't know the exact frequency down to the decimal because they are normally bleeding through to other MHz.
  3. I second Keepass, much nicer than a txt file in encrypted storage.
  4. I've been getting regular consumer drives (normally one on a really good sale/discount at a retail shop) and just replacing drives every 3-5 years to prevent failures, works out nice since TB/$ has been getting better and better each time i need to so i get a larger drive to replace the out-going one Price to life ratio normally works out about the same as trying to get long lasting reliable drives
  5. Heh, so my 3x 5TB, 1x 4TB, 3x 3TB, 1x 2TB is a "metric shit ton"? That's my data storage/VM server and it's 2/3 full for each of those drives. Guess I'll spit out my other specs since I'm here: Old Full Size Antec case (when plastic windows were first coming around) MSI z77 Mpower mobo i7 3770K Over-Clocked to 4.20GHz (CPU-Z reports) 5GHz (Windows reports assuming that's turbo boost so probably not all cores) Air Cooled with some big bulky thing that makes it so the door won't go on, not like I use it since all those drives won't fit inside either ;) 4x Crucial 8GB RAM sticks Radion RX 580 GeForce GTX 760 TI (for the extra monitor support mainly because it was laying around and a DP->DVI adapter was not) Crucial 480GB SSD for OS + those drives mentioned above for storage of VMs/Digital Media Archive 750W Gold cert PS My main system is: Corsair Carbide Series 100R Silent Mid Tower ASUS Maixmus IX Code mobo ^onboard graphics enabled for additional monitor support (oculus takes up one spot on main card) i7 7700K Over-Cloaked to 5.0GHz (CPU-Z reports as does Windows strangely on this one) H100i v2 AIO Cooler 2x Corsair Dominator Platinum 16GB RAM GeForce GTX 1080 (Hybrid Cooled) 960 Pro 1TB for OS/daily usage SanDisk Ultra II 1TB for games 750W Platinum cert PS Also have a firewall/gateway passive cooled micro system, eeePC 1000H running non-VPN side Pi-Hole server, R-Pi 3 running VPN side Pi-Hole server, 6x R-Pis (3s & 2s mixed) running motionPiOS for security cameras around the house, an old dual core Sony Viao just to display the front door camera output beside the door, an hp g5 server w/ 5TB storage for the important stuff to backup, moto Xoom being used as just a clock, oh and a Asus Zepherus for travel My favorite part about it all is the screen setup though:
  6. They had one for the original tetra tactical edition, made for 15" laptops and it fits my 10" tablet with the longest side horizontally snugly. I'm not sure why they switched it back to the everyday carry bag but that one is def not as nice IMO (and i have them both). The backpack is a really a nice bag I still use it to this day and holds the tetra, 4x anker batteries in the front pocket nicely with all antennas attached and plenty of room for other stuff plus laptop in the main compartment.
  7. only 256 cuda cores, you get over 2 times that with a 1050 and for half the price...plus i would wonder about the compatibility being an embedded system, it has a linux environment you can work with but that's an extra cost...
  8. You can use a gaming laptop to brute force passwords. You probably don't want to though. You'll normally have a lot more heat to deal with especially since it will push it to the limits of usage for however long you have it running. Also if you are looking to get a laptop instead of building a "big desktop" understand that you are pay 2-3 times more money for the components of the laptop versus getting better desktop components at the same price. If you wanted the laptop for other purposes and want the portability that may be fine, but you'd be better off looking into a service that will try to crack it for you or renting a virtual server to connect to and use it's power (though that gets expensive since you would want one that provides a graphics card with the system for better crunching performance).
  9. A bootable usb stick is using the connected system's hardware to run the OS. Where the armory is the hardware itself and you connect to the os running on it through usb. Think of it like having a raspberry pi the size of a flash drive that's what the usb armory is. You can hook up a monitor, keyboard and mouse to it and use it without any additional "computer". I really enjoy mine.
  10. I'm enjoying the OnlyKey usb hardware password manager. https://crp.to/p/
  11. Wouldn't recommend PureVPN or WANSecurity anymore https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/cyberstalking-suspect-arrested-after-vpn-providers-shared-logs-with-the-fbi/ They apparently keep logs and turn them over to the FBI if needed. I'd still recommend Private Internet Access as they're the only ones I know of that have been proven in court to not be able to provide logs on request.
  12. Anything wireless can be jammed pretty easily, but cell jammers usually will land you in jail pretty quickly in the US. A router blasting deauth packets will normally barely get a second look. Unless you find a security system that is operating each on a sim itself (fairly expensive i would think) then more than likely they are going to just be wifi and a pineapple will take them down rather quickly. I had a friend that didn't believe me on this either when I asked why he didn't wire because he had the option to do so, he said why would he. I pulled out he nano and started up deauthing module and minute later all his security cameras were offline, by the next week he switched them all over to wired option instead.
  13. It should support the 32 & 64 gb cards, I'm not sure if it will support the 128 gb or not but for sdcards over 2GB it has to be FAT32/VFAT (according to the FAQ). I normally use 32gb cards myself since I'm using twin duck its nice to have the extra storage space for usb drive space.
  14. Also with the dolphin attack and ultra sounds you could play it from your pocket right beside someone and have their phone freak out in their hand
  15. They don't. Antennas add range, the actual radio chips they are hooked up to doesn't change and that is what determines frequency compatibility.
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