Cover image for Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents.
Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents.
Title:
Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents.
Author:
Sjogelid, Stefan.
ISBN:
9781849695794
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (170 pages)
Contents:
Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents -- Table of Contents -- Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents -- Credits -- About the Author -- About the Reviewers -- www.PacktPub.com -- Support files, eBooks, discount offers and more -- Why Subscribe? -- Free Access for Packt account holders -- Preface -- What this book covers -- What you need for this book -- Who this book is for -- Conventions -- Reader feedback -- Customer support -- Downloading the example code -- Errata -- Piracy -- Questions -- 1. Getting Up to No Good -- A brief history lesson on the Pi -- The ins and outs of the Raspberry Pi -- GPIO -- RCA video -- Audio -- LEDs -- USB -- LAN -- HDMI -- Power -- SD card -- Writing Raspbian OS to the SD card -- Getting Raspbian -- SD card image writing in Windows -- SD card image writing in Mac OS X or Linux -- Booting up and configuring Raspbian -- Basic commands to explore your Pi -- Accessing the Pi over the network using SSH -- Wired network setup -- Wi-Fi network setup -- Connecting to the Pi from Windows -- Connecting to the Pi from Mac OS X or Linux -- The importance of a sneaky headless setup -- Keeping your system up-to-date -- Summary -- 2. Audio Antics -- Configuring your audio gadgets -- Introducing the ALSA sound system -- Controlling the volume -- Switching between HDMI and analog audio output -- Testing the speakers -- Preparing to record -- Testing the microphone -- Clipping, feedback distortion, and improving sound quality -- Recording conversations for later retrieval -- Writing to a WAV file -- Writing to an MP3 or OGG file -- Creating command shortcuts with aliases -- Keep your recordings running safely with tmux -- Listening in on conversations from a distance -- Listening on Windows -- Listening on Mac OS X or Linux -- Talking to people from a distance -- Talking on Windows -- Talking on Mac OS X or Linux.

Distorting your voice in weird and wonderful ways -- Make your computer do the talking -- Scheduling your audio actions -- Start on power up -- Start in a couple of minutes from now -- Controlling recording length -- Bonus one line sampler -- Summary -- 3. Webcam and Video Wizardry -- Setting up your camera -- Meet the USB Video Class drivers and Video4Linux -- Finding out your webcam's capabilities -- Capturing your target on film -- Viewing your webcam in VLC media player -- Viewing in Windows -- Viewing in Mac OS X -- Viewing on Linux -- Recording the video stream -- Recording in Windows -- Recording in Mac OS X -- Recording in Linux -- Detecting an intruder and setting off an alarm -- Creating an initial Motion configuration -- Trying out Motion -- Collecting the evidence -- Viewing the evidence -- Hooking up more cameras -- Preparing a webcam stream in Windows -- Preparing a webcam stream in Mac OS X -- Configuring Motion for multiple input streams -- Building a security monitoring wall -- Turning your TV on or off using the Pi -- Scheduling video recording or staging a playback scare -- Summary -- 4. Wi-Fi Pranks - Exploring your Network -- Getting an overview of all the computers on your network -- Monitoring Wi-Fi airspace with Kismet -- Preparing Kismet for launch -- First Kismet session -- Adding sound and speech -- Enabling rouge access point detection -- Mapping out your network with Nmap -- Finding out what the other computers are up to -- How encryption changes the game -- Traffic logging -- Shoulder surfing in Elinks -- Pushing unexpected images into browser windows -- Knocking all visitors off your network -- Protecting your network against Ettercap -- Analyzing packet dumps with Wireshark -- Running Wireshark on Windows -- Running Wireshark on Mac OS X -- Running Wireshark on Linux -- Summary -- 5. Taking your Pi Off-road.

Keeping the Pi dry and running with housing and batteries -- Setting up point-to-point networking -- Creating a direct wired connection -- Static IP assignment on Windows -- Static IP assignment on Mac OS X -- Static IP assignment on Linux -- Creating an ad hoc Wi-Fi network -- Connecting to an ad hoc Wi-Fi network on Windows -- Connecting to an ad hoc Wi-Fi network on Mac OS X -- Tracking the Pi's whereabouts using GPS -- Tracking the GPS position on Google Earth -- Preparing a GPS beacon on the Pi -- Setting up Google Earth -- Setting up a GPS waypoint logger -- Mapping GPS data from Kismet -- Using the GPS as a time source -- Setting up the GPS on boot -- Controlling the Pi with your smartphone -- Receiving status updates from the Pi -- Tagging tweets with GPS coordinates -- Scheduling regular updates -- Keeping your data secret with encryption -- Creating a vault inside a file -- Summary -- Graduation -- Index.
Abstract:
A playful, informal approach to using the Raspberry Pi for mischief!Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents is for all mischievous Raspberry Pi owners who'd like to see their computer transform into a neat spy gadget to be used in a series of practical pranks and projects. No previous skills are required to follow along and if you're completely new to Linux, you'll pick up much of the basics for free.Apart from the Raspberry Pi board itself, a USB microphone and/or a webcam is required for most of the audio/video topics and a WiFi dongle is recommended for the networking examples. A Windows/Mac OS X/Linux computer (or second Raspberry Pi) is also recommended for remote network access.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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