The hacking edition OS does not have a complete library - as such berkeley.
Perhaps a BT OS?
The hacking edition OS does not have a complete library - as such berkeley.
Perhaps a BT OS?
Getting Airpwn to work is ruining my life
Of course, if you really wanted to have some fun, go to Wal-Mart late at night and ask the greeter if they could help you find trashbags, roll of carpet, rope, quicklime, clorox and a shovel. See if they give you any strange looks. --Streaker69
I'm talking about creating or porting a BT OS for Nokia n800. The Nokia n800 internet tablet runs on maemo and an Internet Tablet Hackers Edition OS 2008 was released however the OS is missing libraries which allow pen testing tools to run. A backtrack OS for this maemo device would give pen testing devices such as the neo freerunner with neopwn a run for their money, it'd be cheaper and more practical.
Getting Airpwn to work is ruining my life
When I still had one of those pieces of junk, all the "hacker edition" oses did was allow running the newer os on the older hardware. I had the n800, and running kismet on it was fun, for the couple minutes it would run before either kismet just quit, or locking up the whole device. Then there was the metasploit package. That was cool, in a running it on a 286 kinda way. I suppose having the n810 would make entering things into the command line a bit easier, but it still has the crappy wifi radio. Nokia just hasn't opened up all the hardware for an easy to use pentesting distro.
Really, when it comes down to it, having a handheld pentest device will either be the Neopwn, the Immunity SILICA, which is a n800 with a really expensive($3600) closed source application, or a Zaurus.
Of course, if you really wanted to have some fun, go to Wal-Mart late at night and ask the greeter if they could help you find trashbags, roll of carpet, rope, quicklime, clorox and a shovel. See if they give you any strange looks. --Streaker69
OK, I did a little research into handheld devices that have open source drivers. It seems that the ipaq 214 is a good device, has linux ported to it and has full functionality of the drivers. It has also been used for pentesting in the past.
Getting Airpwn to work is ruining my life
I've seen those things at my local microcenter. Pretty cool looking bit of kit. Kinda on the big side, but not too bad.
You're liable to run out of storage space pretty quick if you're logging anything. They don't have the usb host or cf/sd working yet. Can the wireless at least go into monitor mode? It's a marvel chipset.
Of course, if you really wanted to have some fun, go to Wal-Mart late at night and ask the greeter if they could help you find trashbags, roll of carpet, rope, quicklime, clorox and a shovel. See if they give you any strange looks. --Streaker69