#usb

california@diaspora.permutationsofchaos.com

Tinker board in #RaspberryPi format has #RISC-V #CPU

URI: https://www.beagleboard.org/boards/beaglev-fire

  • 4x 64-bit #RV64GC Application cores (U54-MC)
  • Fmax of 667 MHz (–40 °C to 100 °C Tj)
  • 2GB LPDDR4
  • 16GB Kingston #eMMC
  • 128Mbit SPI flash
  • #USB Type-C with high-Speed (480Mbps) dual-role support and power input
  • Gigabit #Ethernet
  • M.2 E-Key socket for #WiFi and other #PCIe/SDIO modules
  • microSD card socket
  • Price $150

BeagleVFire

#hardware #iot #technology #beagleboard #BeagleVFire

california@diaspora.permutationsofchaos.com

#MiniOS is a lightweight and fast #Linux #distribution designed for installation on a #USB drive.

A distinctive feature of MiniOS is its modular approach to system configuration, which allows users to add or remove modules as needed. This makes the system easy to use and flexible in customization. Based on MiniOS, you can create your own version of the system by simply and quickly creating the necessary modules with the set of programs you need, creating your own unique #ISO using our utilities. In addition, MiniOS occupies only 350-1660 MB of disk space (depending on the version) and can be run from a USB drive without the need to install it on your #computer's hard disk.

Web: https://minios.dev
GitHub: https://github.com/orgs/minios-linux/repositories

#software #OS #OpenSource

danie10@squeet.me

Validrive Detects Fake USB Drives with Inflated Capacity: Many found on Amazon already

Validrive app's window showing title Validrive with copyright notices and what it is about and why it was created.
At first, this might seem like a minor annoyance: You purchase a 1 or 2 terabyte drive at a bargain price, and you receive a 64 GB drive instead. But that’s NOT what happens here!

The drive appears to be the 1 or 2 terabyte drive you purchased. You plug it into your computer and everything looks fine. You can even copy files to the drive; as many as you want. And when you look at the drive’s contents, the files are there. But what’s insidious is that the files’ contents may have never been stored.

These fraudulent drives contain just enough storage – typically 64GB – to convincingly hold the file system’s directory listing. But once its first 64GB of storage space has been filled, the contents of any additional files will not actually be stored. Their names, dates and sizes will be stored in the directory at the front of the drive. Everything will appear to be fine. But the files’ contents will be blank because they were “stored” where no storage exists.

Operating systems do not verify that the data they write was actually written. They rely upon the honesty of storage devices to report errors. If a write error occurs, then the operating system will rewrite the data elsewhere. But these deliberately fraudulent drives never report any problems – they just silently discard any data written where there’s no storage.

It is a freeware, and very small footprint (written in Assembler), portable utility, so no installation required, but unfortunately does only run on Windows OS.

I was listening to feedback by Steve on his Security Now podcast (episode 943), and the scary part is he has already tested 12 USB sticks he bought off Amazon, and EVERY one of them was found to be fraudulent. Many show 4-star reviews full of praise for the devices, but you’ll see some reviews mention the drives “stopped” working after a few months. It is easy to fake what capacity is reported to Windows, and that is why a proper test needed to involve writing and reading back every region of the drive. ValiDrive performs a quick, random-sequence spot-check across the drive’s entire declared storage space. At every location, it verifies the successful storage and retrieval of random (unspoofable) test data.

He goes on to also explain why some drives can be very slow during the test, due to needing to step up the voltage from 5V to 20V for the write operations. This is apparently why SSD’s can be so much faster than a USB drive.

So, if you buy any USB drive online (or even from a retailer) you may want to run this test first and check you got what you paid for.

See https://www.grc.com/validrive.htm
#Blog, #fakeUSB, #technology, #USB

nowisthetime@pod.automat.click

#Tails #Linux #USB with Persistence (Be invisible online in 7 minutes)
https://www.bitchute.com/video/TB9HkNeeNAjf/

How to Install Tails on a USB Flash Drive in 7 minutes :)

PDF documentation: https://davidbombal.wiki/tailsprivacy

Download from here: https://tails.net/

Tails Linux USB with Persistence (Be invisible online in 7 minutes)

How to Install Tails on a USB Flash Drive in 7 minutes :) PDF documentation: https://davidbombal.wiki/tailsprivacy Download from here: https://tails.net/ // David's SOCIAL // Discord: / discord Twitter: / davidbombal Instagram: ...