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deadlyhabit

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Posts posted by deadlyhabit

  1. Also can recommend on the cheap http://www.ebay.com/itm/121560213363

    Obviously not actually 50000mAh (especially when you feel the weight), but directly from China, the solar works great and for the price can't go wrong.

    Works great for my Pineapple, Reaver Pro II, powering a USB hub, charging my tablet or phone.

    Between this and my Pineapple Juice 15000 have loads of juice for my devices in my mobile kit bag.

  2. Not to familiar with ruby (something new to delve into), but would it be possible to add/modify the script to send an email on success to something like gmail which alongside a cell phone alert let's you know it's done?

    Like in python

    def send_email(user, pwd, recipient, subject, body):
        import smtplib
    
        gmail_user = user
        gmail_pwd = pwd
        FROM = user
        TO = recipient if type(recipient) is list else [recipient]
        SUBJECT = subject
        TEXT = body
    
        # Prepare actual message
        message = """\From: %s\nTo: %s\nSubject: %s\n\n%s
        """ % (FROM, ", ".join(TO), SUBJECT, TEXT)
        try:
            server = smtplib.SMTP("smtp.gmail.com", 587)
            server.ehlo()
            server.starttls()
            server.login(gmail_user, gmail_pwd)
            server.sendmail(FROM, TO, message)
            server.close()
            print 'successfully sent the mail'
        except:
            print "failed to send mail"
    

    http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10147455/trying-to-send-email-gmail-as-mail-provider-using-python

    Working on something similar in python to automate attacks for Kali, and ideally suited for nethunter and potentially a bluetooth paired android smartwatch as well.

  3. Bill isn't in charge of M$ anymore though (or if he is it's not in a public capacity in the corporate hierarchy). Still involved in the company and always will be the first person people think of when it comes to them, but not the one doing a lot of changes or heading the direction of the company publicly.

  4. Basically if you append /%%30%30 to the end of any url you manually enter it will crash chrome (desktop) and a mouse over of a link containing it can crash chrome, or just the page you were on with the link.

    On mobile Chrome only mouse over works at least from testing it on my tablet and phone.

  5. Sitting down? Nothing in your mouth?
    
    Microsoft has developed its own Linux distribution. And Azure runs it to do networking.
    
    Redmond's revealed that it's built something called Azure Cloud Switch (ACS), describing it as “a cross-platform modular operating system for data center networking built on Linux” and “our foray into building our own software for running network devices like switches.”
    
    Kamala Subramanian, Redmond's principal architect for Azure Networking, writes that: “At Microsoft, we believe there are many excellent switch hardware platforms available on the market, with healthy competition between many vendors driving innovation, speed increases, and cost reductions.”
    
    (Translation: Microsoft partners, we mean you no harm.)
    
    “However, what the cloud and enterprise networks find challenging is integrating the radically different software running on each different type of switch into a cloud-wide network management platform. Ideally, we would like all the benefits of the features we have implemented and the bugs we have fixed to stay with us, even as we ride the tide of newer switch hardware innovation.”
    
    (Translation: Software-defined networking (SDN) is a very fine idea.)
    
    But it appears Redmond couldn't find SDN code to fits its particular needs, as it says ACS “... focuses on feature development based on Microsoft priorities” and “allows us to debug, fix, and test software bugs much faster. It also allows us the flexibility to scale down the software and develop features that are required for our datacenter and our networking needs.”
    
    ACS is designed to use the Switch Abstraction Interface (SAI), an OpenCompute effort that offers an API to program ASICs inside network devices.
    
    Microsoft's post revealing ACS says a fair bit about its features, but doesn't explain the relationship between Microsoft and Linux. Perhaps the complexity of the world's switching ecosystem was the reason: Redmond says it has demonstrated ACS across with “four ASIC vendors (Mellanox, Broadcom, Cavium, and the Barefoot software switch), six implementations of SAI (Broadcom, Dell, Mellanox, Cavium, Barefoot, and Metaswitch), and three applications stacks (Microsoft, Dell, and Metaswitch).”
    
    Subramaniam's post ends by letting us know: “We’re talking about ACS publicly as we believe this approach of disaggregating the switch software from the switch hardware will continue to be a growing trend in the networking industry and we would like to contribute our insights and experiences of this journey starting here.”
    
    That experience clearly includes Linux, not Windows, as the path to SDN.
    
    Satya Nadella's Microsoft is a very different animal, unafraid to use any technology if it gets the job done. But Microsoft building a Linux? Wow. Just wow. ®
    

    http://linux.slashdot.org/story/15/09/18/1224234/microsoft-has-built-a-linux-distro

  6. Hi Guys!

    I've been trying to install Kismet Server package but I'm getting the following error after updating packages list:

    root@Pineapple:~# opkg update
    Starting update..
    Downloading from https://www.wifipineapple.com/mk5/packages/Packages.gz
    Update successful.
    root@Pineapple:~# opkg -d sd install kismet-server
    Installing kismet-server (2010-07-R1-2) to sd...
    Downloading http://cloud.wifipineapple.com/mk5/packages/kismet-server_2010-07-R1-2_ar71xx.ipk.
    Collected errors:
     * opkg_download: Failed to download http://cloud.wifipineapple.com/mk5/packages/kismet-server_2010-07-R1-2_ar71xx.ipk, wget returned 255.
     * opkg_install_pkg: Failed to download kismet-server. Perhaps you need to run 'opkg update'?
     * opkg_install_cmd: Cannot install package kismet-server.
    root@Pineapple:~#
    
    

    I think redirection from cloud.wifipineapple.com to http://downloads.openwrt.org/ it's not working.

    Thank you.

    yeah i'm pretty sure 255 is it can't be found.

  7. I've wanted to do something similar, just the costs aren't in my price range at the moment to mess around and I'm still messing about with my covert Pi 2/Router Kali project. I was also thinking something similar with an RC car, or even stationary like a hollowed out lawn decoration or one of those hide-a-key rocks for a temp dead drop without being too conspicuous.

    A local hacker space is a great place to start though as some of the guys at mine have been a wealth of knowledge on topics like drones and such that I have little to no info on.

  8. I'm still baffled why they pulled the finale for a week. Not the biggest fan of the show but with Hannibal ending and being cancelled, I need something to watch until the new seasons of Vikings and American Horror Story. It may no longer be the techy show from the first few eps but its entertaining.

  9. 70% working on 100% like you said water from a stone, but I've done college etc without touching my GI bill or Chapter 31 (which I'm hoping to pay for certs after dealing with the assholes).

    If I can pinch a penny while buying my first house is my mentality.

    If you hound them enough then you get what you need and deserve.

  10. I was kinda curious about the whole quantum computing thing. I had read about it in Michael Crichton's Timeline 1999. I hadn't really paid it much thought after that. But it's been in the news a bit lately. D-Wave systems is the only known manufacturer of quantum computers. From what I read the chip is only 340GFlops (a little bit more juice than Invidia's Tegra K-1 Development board) but the entire machine cost's about $10 million.

    They are in the process of developing better quantum chips and the main problem that I'm seeing with it is that the chips themselves have to be operated at 0.1Kelvin which is just a smidgen above absolute zero. (no molecular motion). And that's how you get the unique quantum properties that allow the processor to work. But it takes a lot of cooling equipment to make this happen it takes up a lot of space. I realize this technology is quite new and we'll probably see a lot of further development in the field of quantum computing. But I really don't see what all of the fuss is about.

    There were some articles and posts talking about how the NSA is worried about quantum computers being able to crack encryption but at the current state of quantum computing I don't see it doing anything like that.

    My question is: What's the big deal?

    Am I missing something? I'm sure some of you are way better a physics and also computing and someone will have something intelligent to say on the subject.

    Theres a couple like new to the subject books on quantum physics by john gribbins worth reading about the schrodinger cat problem https://www.google.com/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=john+gribbin+quantum+physics

  11. Never heard of em, but just re-certifying for some I let lapsed to go for CEH on way to LPT I got a quote close to $6k for A+/Network+/Security+.

    Hoping I can use some of my VA benefits to cover certs while I'm going for my Comp Sci masters.

    AfXYpMs.png

  12. As digip already said in the second post of this topic, you can emulate the real AP to the point where the target will try to connect to you, but the 4-way handshake is there to prove to the other side, in both directions, that the password is known. So the device needs to prove knowledge of the password via a hashed message and the server needs to do the same. Since your fake AP doesn't have this password the client will refuse to connect to you. Your only recourse is to brute-force the crypto which for a WPA2 device is, to put it mildly, a non-trivial challenge.

    but with the hashes like in a pixie attack we're getting closer
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