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H@L0_F00

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Everything posted by H@L0_F00

  1. Psychosis was working on this but I don't think it's been accomplished yet since mapping with GRUB4DOS differs from Grub2.
  2. PLoP is ran from a CD or even a floppy, although it can be installed. The linux CD sounds like it should work. I would rather chainload the complete flash drive instead of specifying each entry on a CD which isn't rw, but this could be done from the same CD.
  3. Put the "casper" folder on the root of your device. I'm working on a way to get around this but I've ran into some trouble, so, for now, you'll have to just put the "casper" directory on the root.
  4. I posted a direct link to the specific post you need to look at, but it doesn't jump to the post like it should. Anyways, you should take a look at the posts below, specifically post #5. It sounds like that will work for you. EDIT: Just fixed the link.
  5. I'm looking forward to this! It would be a great idea to log all IRC and make it available with the videos when they are later released, just in case there are time conflicts and someone can't watch the presentation during the specified time, but would like to look over any discussion held during the presentation.
  6. Steady State DeepFreeze You could also map it as a HDD, theoretically, with GRUB4DOS or Grub2.
  7. In my DHTI class today, we went over EMI and how a signal can be picked up by another wire or device if not properly arranged. It got me thinking... Would a "wiretap" by EMI be possible/practical? If so, why is it not more commonly used? If not, why?
  8. Ok, what you need to do, then, is move your /bootclone/live directory to the root of the device, so it would be just /live unless you'd like to try and edit the scripts. I don't use CloneZilla, but you could get an idea of how to go about editing scripts by taking a look at my Ophcrack guide where I edited the scripts to look for the Ophcrack tables in a different directory. You'd have to figure out which script is the one that tells CloneZilla to look in /live/image/live and make it look in /bootclone/live/image/live in order for it to find the scripts you'd like to keep in that directory. Grep can come in handy (something like " grep -r -i '/live/image/live' * " after extracting the initrd file might come up with some results you could take a look at).
  9. Did you try what xje4bv posted? That should work for larger flash drives. To get back the "lost" space, use the U3 Removal Tool.
  10. I found CloneSpy while searching for "portable duplicate file finder." It's got many different options and settings, plus it saves any settings to a .ini file, making it portable.
  11. I don't throw away anything. Then again, I'm 16 and without a job...
  12. Lamers use this in my IT class to cheat at Bloon's Tower Defense. You can scan for variables used and modify them. It's also open source.
  13. You just gotta learn what words to (not) use in your query, and how to word it.
  14. Google dude... http://www.askvg.com/firefox-bookmarks-too...ti-row-toolbar/
  15. http://hak5.org/forums/index.php?showtopic...st&p=110411 EDIT: Fixed link
  16. Has the word "think" become archaic?
  17. http://hak5.org/forums/index.php?showtopic=14130
  18. Have you tried mapping the ISO? Is Restore 6910p integrated into CloneZilla? To list the directory structure, you might wanna take a look at Tree for Windows. It would look much nicer.
  19. What I meant referring to Ophcrack was how it looks for the /tables which means you must keep the "tables" directory on the root of your drive, making it look not so nice. I edited "launch.sh" in the initial RAMdisk file used by Ophcrack though, to make it search for the tables in /.multiboot/Ophcrack/tables which means I don't need /tables anymore, making my drive a lot cleaner and more organized. You could do something like that with TRK to enable you to make it find the folders in a different location so you could keep it all in one place and not worry about keeping /trk. As for system rescue software, usually I just backup and reinstall. If it's somebody else's computer though, and they'd rather just have me try to remove any/all viruses, malware, etc. I run Malwarebyte's Anti-Malware, which catches most, if not all, infected items. I also use CCleaner to check out all startup programs. I've used TRK once, but it's not a necessity, and my drive is only 8GB, so I leave it off.
  20. Typo, it should be /dev/sdd. http://hak5.org/forums/index.php?showtopic...st&p=139322 http://hak5.org/forums/index.php?showtopic...st&p=139042 http://hak5.org/forums/index.php?showtopic...st&p=138777 So, contrary to what you have discovered, it seems that trk2usb can be installed on a partition, not the entire device. I'm not sure if this is true though, since I haven't used TRK. I'm quite certain that with some script manipulation you'd be able to change the directory that TRK searches for the needed files in. Theoretically, you could even change the way in which TRK searches for the files and folders in general, which means you could keep your flash drive named whatever you'd like. You'd have to look into how TRK does such things though, and you could get an idea of how to edit by taking a look at my Ophcrack tutorial. Installing GRUB4DOS using Linux
  21. That's because it's not an ISO image, it's a floppy image. I use this. You can mount the image virtually and edit any files on it, if you mount it writeable, and then you can save the image and it will keep the changes you made. If you can get this to work via DOS, go right ahead, I've just never seen DOS that can view an NTFS partition outside the special software, which means you couldn't automate the process, or do it silently.
  22. GRUB4DOS, or GRUB? All ISOs have booted fine for me in GRUB4DOS.
  23. I didn't know we were talking about Grub2 here, which I've never used. Check here for mounting loopbacks in Grub2.
  24. Yes, that should boot just fine.
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