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Hardware Hacking Lord of the Rings Toys Wireless Networking Build

Glowing Hobbit Sword Helps You Find Unsecured Wi-Fi 67

Molly McHugh writes By disassembling your plastic Sting and incorporating the Spark Core, a tiny Wi-Fi development kit, you can hack the toy's light and enlist it to show you when you are near an unsecure network. The best part about this hack? It only requires two things: a Spark Core and a replica Sting with lights and sound, like this one."
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Glowing Hobbit Sword Helps You Find Unsecured Wi-Fi

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  • This thing would never go out. I mean, is there pretty much anywhere you can stand that doesn't have at least an HP printer ad-hoccing away?

    • When I go out in the field behind our house, the Wifi signal is gone. Even halfway out into the dogyard the Wifi is barely there at all. Our wifi or the neighbor's wifi. It's gone.

      I'd hate to live anywhere so busy that there was ubiquitous wifi signal. Here we have jackrabbits and sometimes at night howling coyotes. And possums, of course. Always stupid possums out rambling around in the dark.

  • Great. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:11PM (#48693577)

    Now you can run around in your hobbit-con costume saving the world from unsecured wi-fi, while trying to throw the token ring back from the fire from which it came.

    • Open networks will do more for the world than indiscriminate wireless encryption. This sword should glow blue in the absence of an open network, in preparation for a future where a lack of connectivity is the real danger.
  • "like this one" loses impact as a close when there is no 'this' to behold.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:34PM (#48693641)

    I mean seriously, unsecured WiFi is one thing, but it's the trolls I need to worry about.

    • by plover ( 150551 )

      I mean seriously, unsecured WiFi is one thing, but it's the trolls I need to worry about.

      I hear sunshine takes care of trolls, if you can get them to come out of their mothers' basements during the day.

      At least the sword glows blue when the MAC address begins with 4f:52:43.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:40PM (#48693657)

    It also identifies virgins.

    • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:10PM (#48693729)

      I was going to say it is effective for defending the owner's virginity. But more or less the same idea.

      • I find it sad that people still criticize geeky behaviour for being uncool and preventing you from getting laid, as if being a dudebro that gets laid with superficial women was all life was about.

        • by PPH ( 736903 )

          criticize geeky behaviour for being uncool and preventing you from getting laid

          Well, if that was your goal to begin with: Mission Accomplished. Well done, sir!

  • by Ksevio ( 865461 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @09:56PM (#48693699) Homepage
    Very similar to a project someone did a couple years ago that did the exact same thing: http://jomegat.wordpress.com/2... [wordpress.com]
  • "An overly simplistic diagram, and isn't a totally accurate" but more can be learned at our web page....

    Can you say ripoff? I knew you could.

  • by Livius ( 318358 ) on Monday December 29, 2014 @10:12PM (#48693735)

    That doesn't sound very safe. People will be thinking they've found unsecured wi-fi and then get themselves ambushed by orcs they weren't expecting.

  • Or you could just use one of the dozens of Apps for Android or Apple that shows that and much more info about the nearby hotspots.

    Why do people re-invent the wheel - poorly?

  • Black Slashdotters may want to avoid walking around the city with something that could be seen as a weapon.
  • .... yes I'm old enough to remember building electronic stuff from discrete parts, and now it is actually quite difficult to do so other than for complete trivia. Whilst some of the components are not discrete, this would be a fun project for kids and they would actually learn something from it.
  • At the time, he was always running around in a ninja outfit. But this idea would have been just enough to get him to change costumes. Hint: If you're older than 12, you might want to consider wearing this getup strictly in your own house!

  • If only they released a model that detected a real live woman. Much more useful to the Slashdot community!
  • Providing all my WiFi hotspots unencrypted free for all around and I find my network perfectly secure. Security is ssh+openvpn one can use on top of it.
  • Hello,

    For something a little less conspicuous, a Canary WiFi [canarywireless.com] detector might be a better choice if, for some reason, one couldn't just walk around with a smartphone or tablet.

    Regards,

    Aryeh Goretsky

  • ...find fields of gold?

    • by Quirkz ( 1206400 )

      Hah. No, but carrying a large knife does very adequately suggest, "Don't stand so close to me."

  • The best part about this hack? It only requires two things: a Spark Core and a replica Sting with lights and sound, like this one.

    The worst part about this hack? Ah, who am I kidding, you all know exactly where I'm going with this.

  • Don't forget about the part where 50 cops shoot you repeatedly for waving that thing around.
  • Modify a toy sonic screwdriver to do the same thing. Then you can just say you are a future incarnation of the Doctor.
  • Isn't that precious! (Sorry, couldn't resist)

  • The article claims:

    This prompts Sting to join the network and publishes a message: "{YOUR WI-FI NETWORK} has been vanquished!"

    Looking at the code snippet,

    Spark.publish("vanquished",name); // Feel the Wrath!

    Where exactly is this published? Sure does not appear that it would be anywhere that the owner of this supposedly-vanquished network would see it.

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