Blackberry Pi is up and running! A #raspberrypi 4 running #kali#Linux, with a BlackBerry Q10 keyboard and mouse, 9000mah battery, usbc fast charging, and a hidpi touch screen (Pimaroni Hyperpixel)
The newest project is finally ready for its public debut! Inspired by a tool on #Kali for XFCE desktops, Nix-Incognito was developed to provide a similar mechanism for masking a user's GNOME desktop to better blend in with surrounding #windows PC's during #redteam engagements!
Although it's meant for use on #NixOS systems, it can easily be compiled and ran on any device running #GNOME. Support for other DE's is in the works! 🙌 🤘 😎 #rustlang#cli#programming
I daily drive it, just like some other people here. It lets you run the same software that you use on desktop. Some apps don’t have a UI that works well on mobile (possible workaround: play around with scaling) and some old ones might not have touch support (you would have to use those with mouse or keyboard), but often there are mobile friendly alternatives, so it’s better to use those instead. It can’t replace a proper PC, even if you plug it into a monitor and it’s not a fast device, but it’s usable and you can do fun stuff with it. You can run CLI programs and servers, run Kali Linux (NetHunter Pro), distro hop, make hardware addons (there are some exposed pins on the back) or simply use it as phone. You just have to be an advanced GNU/Linux user, because sometimes workarounds are required.
And when you add the keyboard addon, you can look like a true hackerman:
This was sent to me by a friend of the project today, and I wanted to share it with the rest of the community:
🐲Wishing you and your family a joyous and blessed Lunar New Year! May the Year of the #Kali (Dragon) bring you and your loved ones prosperity, and good health!
Just built my first "roll your own" #Kali live USB.
Trying to build-in some USB Realtek wifi drivers for some cheap - and not so cheap - dongles. I have both $3 dollar generic 802.11n (RTL 8188fu) and TP-Link T2U Nano (RTL 8812au). As well as some other workshop tools.
This might be a way to provide a pre-configured kali environment for users who insist on bringing Windows laptops to workshops.
I don't need a lot of extras, but my workshop currently runs best if the participant has a device providing DHCP. Also, I have USB wifi dongles that need drivers installed to complete a task in the #UAV communications module.
So maybe #Kali on #BeagleBone + RDP to handle those Windows users.
"But my friend runs a PinePhone as a daily driver" (lemmy.ml)