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Lord C

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Posts posted by Lord C

  1. Hi guys,

    I might be being an absolute newb here, but I cannot get my Nano to beacon APs and attract clients. Had no problem with the old Fonera Pineapple + Karma, back in the day.

    I've connected the Nano with wp6, it has Internet access (the news bulletin loads). I can do a scan with Recan, add the SSIDs to the pool.
    In PineAP I switched the daemon to enable and checked the boxes (allow associations, beacon response, capture ssids and broadcast ssid pool etc.).

    No clients connect. I've tried testing with my mobile phones. I can de-auth them, but they always re-connect to their original WiFi and not the Pineapple.

    I've tried enabling the other radio and setting an SSID, clients can see and connect to that. This is how I've tested Modules. 

    Any ideas why I can't broadcast ssids and hijack connections? I've followed the YouTube vids (setup and primer). Also tried resetting the Nano to default.

  2. On 24/08/2017 at 1:31 PM, kbeflo said:

    Would recommend using N-O-D-E's Pi Zero case available open source for 3d printing, also available on his shop.

     

    1lG6uxJ.png

    There are similar solutions with no soldering required, so you don't have to single-purpose your Zero.

  3. Hi guys,

    I've been playing around trying to create a Bluetooth version of Rubber Ducky working. Not sure how useful that would be, but I'm in the very early stages.

    Have been experimenting with this beauty:
    BBC micro:bit

    zjN9Ag0.jpg

    Most 11/12 year olds in the UK will have received one of these in school last year. The BBC ran a programme that allowed schools to apply for free micro:bits for all of Year 7 (6th grade). There's a friendly online interface to program them in Python, but you can actually compile C++ for these badboys.

    They're available for under £15 / $18: http://microbit.org/resellers/, hence making good little gadgets to mess around with for a BT Rubber Ducky.

    The micro:bit has a few pins available, a USB port, a small bluetooth antenna, it's very small and can be battery powered (or USB powered).
    On the front there are 15 LED lights and two buttons to play with:
    jcjojcrc

    You can program the micro:bit to connect via Bluetooth, with little security (no PIN or anything). Then you can use the two buttons to send commands to the computer or smartphone.

    At the moment, I'm only able to send ASCII commands, so I've been mapping out the special commands in an ASCII/latin table. I haven't yet figured out how to use the Windows key, but I have managed to take a screenshot ("\x8C") and save a file with the name pwned ("\x99,s,pwned,\n").

    Sample file available here, just drag and drop it onto your micro:bit, connect to 'ducky' via BT, the left button will take screenshots, the right button will save files.
    Code is available here, hopefully others will be able to assist with this experiment :).

  4. Okay so I thought it was all running nicely since the update, but obviously not.

    I can see a OpenWrt access point for one. But I cannot connect to it. My laptop shows up in Jasager while it's trying to connect, but soon gives us and connects directly to my router. It's as if it's not being assigned an IP.

    I check "Wireless Virtual Adaptor Configuration for Wireless Card wifi0" in webif. I if I disable the access point, I see;

    Committing wireless ...

    Waiting for the commit to finish...

    Reloading wireless ...

    Interface type not supported.

    Although I can enable it fine, with no Interface error.

    I'm plugging the Fon into my router, and setting it's IP to 192.168.123.170.

    Any chance someone could send me a OpenWrt config file to try?

  5. Okay here's a bit of a challenge.

    I know a lot of people are always interested in getting access to the outside world, from a Uni/College network. I'm looking for the exact opposite.

    I have a box on a University network, but you know how their firewalls are... I'm trying to think how I can access that desktop from outside the network.

    Atm I'm thinking have reverse vnc running on my desktop at home, listening for a connection, then http tunnel out from Uni.

    Obviously I can only be in one place at a time, so I'd like to have a couple of ideas up my sleeves before I go in on Friday.

  6. lol sorry its just me not liking the program, especially when it comes to irc. I just dont like that program, but thats just me. Im sure it works perfect for you :D

    In all honesty it's mostly for IM services. And for multiple messaging services, there's nothing better than Pidgin. At least for Linux. Ofc there are alternatives like Adium for Mac OS and Trillian for Windows.

    I really don't see IM clients as a primary tool for IRC. It's like when people use Firefox plugins to chat on IRC, I don't understand that either. I'm sure they have their place, but they're not really #1 when it comes to functionality.

    Get a real, dedicated IRC client?! And use the IM client for, I don't know, IMing? :))

  7. Dropbox is pro!

    You can access your files from work/home desktop and laptop. Saves pulling a USB thumbdrive in and out all the time.

    I think they'll eventually offer more storage space for paying customers.

    Hmm, it makes me think, what if you could setup your own server, and just use it for your /home directory? That would be kinda sick. NAS doesn't quite cut it. I'm talking about making your own secure Cloud.

  8. Sysadmin = Adminstrating Systems... PCs, software, hardware.

    Netadmin = Administrating the network. Connections, ports, cables, servers etc.

    In some cases, like the last college I worked at, you will required to be both.

    Experience + Skill > Qualifications.

    Everywhere uses different technology, so just gen-up on as much as you can - or whatever interests you. Then apply for jobs using that technology. Tbh if you start out as a junior, they'll train you up in the technology they use on site, as long as you're knowledgeable about the general ins-and-outs and of course enthusiastic.

  9. I tried Sorcerer Linux (the pre-Gentoo) and some other weird distros like that, but my first real (and successful) Linux desktop installation was Mandrake.

    Enjoyed Mandrake for quite a while, before moving to Slackware, thinking I was pro *sigh*.

    Got tired of compiling every damn program from scratch, so I decided to give Ubuntu a try in 2005. Worked great, stuck with it since =]

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