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kenadak

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  1. now that I have my Iphone I was looking into things to do with my old HTC Wizard (ATT 8125) it's been sitting around doing nothing for about 2 years now, and I thought it might be a good remote/keyboard for my XBMC/HTPC anyone have any resources on getting something like this started? Thanks,
  2. if you can get a friend who can open an IPsec/VPN Tunnel for you you could tunnel into his connection and get out to the game from there... but this will add lag/latency
  3. kenadak

    WoW

    hey, I was stoked when Wess and Darren announced they were on the Stormrage Server... I've got a 60 Priest and a 46 Mage and I never see them on... I've told both of them I'd help em out if they ever needed it. (60 priests don't offer often ) anyway, any Hak5'er that's come to stormrage let me know, I have no set schedule so yell if ya see me... (Kenadak is the priest, Sparked is my mage) happy hunting (and yes, I was on Stormrage since launch (long before digg or hak5 :P )
  4. I've built a MythTV, SageTV, Beyond TV, and a Windows Vista MCE all work to varying degrees.. here's my pros/cons of each Myth TV Pro -Free (as in Beer) -Linux Based -Active Community -very customizable -no DRM -knoppmyth livecd cons -tough learning curve for some devices -support can be hard to find -IR blaster support is lacking Sage TV pro -Linux or Windows based -excellent community support -customization is encouraged -good technical support -great Electronic Program Guide -good support for Hardware -no DRM -place shifting -commercial detection and removal -web interface with streaming -great as a media recorder if you want to watch the content on another device (what I do) cons -resource hog -can be tough installing some of the third party addons -onscreen gui sucks Beyond TV pros -strong OEM support -good EPG -comes with a lot of things out of the box that many others require as addons -good onscreen gui -less resource intensive -good HD support cons -free version requires hardware encoding and decoding -no real community support -not much customization -proprietary format (I couldn't figure out how to view the files on any other machine.) MCE pros -Microsoft -solid Hardware support -actively being developed -very good OTA (over the air) HDTV support -moderate resource support -good gui cons -Microsoft -dvr-hd container crap -haven't found a good web interface thats about it... hope that gets some conversations going... I'm using ADS Instant HDTV for OTA HD and two PVR 150's for standard Def. Most everything except MCE can be viewed with VLC which is nice.
  5. Firefox VLC Thunderbird Notepad Paint.net Open Office itunes apt-get freecell wow
  6. Ok, I've been working on this for a LONG time... and just now got some of the key features in place... I'd like to ask the Hak5 community if they can get me the rest of the way there... Things you need... -palm or windows based phone/PDA that has access to Wifi or EVDO. (I'm using the HTC Wizard aka cingular 8125) -PVR that doesn't DRM... I'm using SageTV with the Web interface (*Opera works with it on the phone... IE doesn't) -TCPMP I recommend this to EVERYONE with a smartphone/PDA -a Transcoder that can encode Divx or h.264 down to under 250kbps (haven't found a good one yet... I paid for lathe but it's not being developed very well and I still like Pocket DivX Encoder better... -Finally a streaming server... I haven't found anything that would stream really well but the best/only thing I've found is pocket Stream server that you have to buy from handango for about $20 I've been trying to use sage's placeshifter but they don't have a mobile client. with all of these tools working I can essentially watch my recordings on my phone... as long as I do the re encoding and then add it to the streaming server myself... I want this automated... unfortunately many of these tools are guified and don't have friendly command line options... anyone interested?
  7. hmm... that pretty much makes it windows... Linux needs to be "fluid" to fit whatever application is being used. Redhat tried but as redhat grew it started to bloat and fedora was born. Fedora has always been bloated. ubuntu is about as userfriendly as it gets and check out Automatix for some even more friendlyness!
  8. the extent of "hacking" needed on a wifi network greatly varies... 1. simple act of clicking on the network and saying connect is about as complex as it gets (this is my hack of choice) 2. social engineering.. "hello, I'm the new computer guy can I use your computer" is about as easy (note it helps if you look the part) 3. brute force dictionary word 20-30 seconds. 4. brute force key under 7 characters 5 hours 5. capture a crapload of packets and crack using unique Key Frame attack 6. get physical access to AP and replace it with a know AP 7. drive to next access point and repeat 1-7
  9. ClamAV for those that want to know is for scanning e-mail traffic
  10. experimental machine=Hackintosh 10.4.5/Kororaa XGL surfing/hacking/coding machine=ubuntu web/fileserver=CentOS World of Warcraft computer=windowsXP (soon to be Vista if I can shoehorn WOW to work)
  11. not mine but entertaining.
  12. http://wiki.osx86project.org/wiki/index.php/HCL_10.4.5 is a good resource also, I've found that USB devices work quite well (I haven't tried a USB WIFI connector yet but my bluetooth and my usb headphone jack work.
  13. come on... this is a hacking sight and you cant figure out how to convert http://img480.imageshack.us/img480/438/sna...t00146kw.th.jpg to http://img480.imageshack.us/img480/438/snapshot00146kw.jpg BTW... I think it's a stove/oven as far as crazy crap with linux installed...my Dreamcast runs linux quite well.
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