Jump to content

blackball

Active Members
  • Posts

    14
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by blackball

  1. Has anyone run into issues using ICS in Kali? I'm using WLAN0 for internet and eth0 for the pineapple but when I connect the pineapple via eth0 the internet connection stops working. This persists until I reboot. Any ideas? I did configure the routes through network manager to use only wlan0 for "resources on its network".

  2. I question: I use Backtrack 5 R3 and my problem is:

    Pineapple connected to eth0

    Internet in Backtrack it´s in Wlan0

    I connect to my router and then run ./wp4.sh.

    All runs nice, but some minutes later, the connection lost, aparently because wicd make a auto connect to eth0 killing the wlan0 connection to internet.

    I try make a wicd stop but nothing.

    So, I read in the forum several problems with pineapple and wicd. There is a way to replace wicd with the network manager that appear in the video?

    My backtrack is 5 R3 Gnome and runs in it´s own partition no Virtual.

    Thanks a lot.

    I ran into this issue too. Wicd doesn't support concurrent connections. Since it is easier for me to manually configure eth0 than set up a WPA supplicant, etc, I went the route of simply telling wicd not to configure the ethernet connection for me. This is really simple. Under "Preferences, General Settings" in wicd, erase the interface name for the wired interface. This worked like a charm for me and made wicd forget about my ethernet.

  3. I was wondering the same thing about using an Alfa USB rather than a 3G hot spot. How would you even go about configuring that? I'm thinking that way you could do a coffee house redirect using their wifi, but you'd need to do something about getting past the splash page...

  4. It sounds like everyone else who's using images is linking to existing sites rather than hosting it directly on the device. Space acutally shouldn't be a problem (and isn't in this case) as I imagine it should be possible to fit small files in the /www/ folder (as I did) or link to an external USB device (which I have used). The thing that I found odd is that whether I place my image in the same location as the html file and simply reference it without specifying a path (like url=image.jpg) or leave it on the USB drive and reference it using a full path, it just doesn't show on the page. My end goal is to have a stand-alone device that does not require a 3g connection or tethered laptop from which I can host specific sites for redirect. Sounds like at this point no one else has tried this with the v4. Some of the earlier hak5 tutorials showed how to do this with earlier versions from downloading existing webpages to capturing the posts.

    yup, just used an direct image location from some site wherever (found on google images) and embeded a youtube Iframe for the video i wanted. then just wrote the page. copy the code into a notepad txt file and save it as whatever.html and view it in your browser if you want to play with it.

  5. So I'm playing with the rickroll feature and I've successfully redirected to my custom HTML page. The only problem is that the text appears but the image doesn't. I'm guessing there's some sort of reference problem, but for the life of me I can't figure it out. I'm doing something like <img src="image.png"> where the image is in the WWW folder the same as the index.html file that's calling it. Any guesses what I'm doing wrong?

  6. Very cool! That's exactly what I was considering. I'll have to see if my hardware hacking skills are up to the task.

    I have succeeded in building a handheld hacking device with a display out of a fonera (pineapple router).

    In the end it's not very practical, considering you could do the same with a small laptop, but it's a lot of fun to build one.

    Check out my results:

    http://emerythacks.blogspot.com/2010/08/wifon-fonera-powered-handheld-wifi.html (old version with a monochorme character screen)

    http://emerythacks.blogspot.com/2011/04/wifon-20.html (newer version with a color LCD and a touchscreen)

    In both cases it consists of the pineapple router talking via the serial port to a microcontroller driving the display and collecting input.

  7. I like the thought of using a smartphone, since it wouldn't require a mod. My thought for a use-case would be to do some simple "mode changes" on the fly for the pineapple. In addition, seeing the target environment in a small, possibly integrated, display seemed like a useful addition to have an all-in-one device. I'm guessing that all that could be done with a smartphone, but I was concerned with adding concurrent connections to the one wireless interface available on the pineapple.

    Phones/tablets are easily your best solution. There is not need for a display on the pineapple. Let's assume for a moment you have a pineapple running in a hotspot, hidden in like a lamp or something... You don't want to walk up and check a display. You want to connect to it remotely so no suspicion is drawn.

×
×
  • Create New...