Success: Pico Day 4

So I followed this guys way: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctCmOhoT9po

It’s so weird because it almost looks like NetworkChucks way. But this guy actually followed the GitHub instructions more directly as opposed to NetworkChucks demonstration which is almost I believe 3 to 4 years old. The interesting thing is I followed the Github page that posted instructions, and it still didn’t work. I’ll need to do further analysis and see what I did differently or if maybe I just missed a step. But otherwise it works now.

I found a payload on the GitHub page: https://github.com/dbisu/pico-ducky

From there I picked out a payload I wanted to test and it ran perfectly. This was ultimately a payload, I would like to create or use a script that could help with troubleshooting. Like plugging in the USB and it grabs general information or automates some troubleshooting. Not sure how that’s going to look yet but I’ll try to map that out today.

I have a lot of Hacking or Technical devices at this point that I continue to play around with.

I’ve got:

  1. Flipper Zero
  2. Raspberry Pi Pico
  3. Portapack H4M
  4. Raspberry Pi 3B+

I’ve done side projects these devices except for the Portapack and the Pi 3B+. I’m still trying to determine what I’m going to do with the Pi 3B+.

For the Portapack H4M that’s pretty much like the Flipper Zero but more powerful.

I have a Lenovo ThinkCentre M910q laying around as well. I installed TrueNas on that but I didn’t really get to utilize it because I believe I did the installation wrong and I didn’t have any type of raid set up on the device.

I would like to build my own server and set it up as a home lab and additionally buy a pfSense router and do some lab experiments on both of those. But I believe what I have now can give me enough hand on projects until I grow bored of them.

Next project I’m trying to decide on what I should do with my Raspberry Pi 3B+. Stay tuned. Thanks for reading