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  • Book Overview & Buying Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents
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Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents

Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents - Third Edition

By : Matthew Poole
4.6 (5)
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Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents

Raspberry Pi for Secret Agents

4.6 (5)
By: Matthew Poole

Overview of this book

This book 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. We’ll help you set up your Raspberry Pi Zero, Raspberry Pi 2 and Raspberry Pi 3 and guide you through a number of pranks and secret agent techniques that are so inconspicuous yet high on mischief. You’ll learn how to configure your operating system for maximum mischief and start exploring audio, video, or Wi-Fi techniques. We’ll show you how to record, listen, or talk to people from a distance and how to set up your own phone network. Then, you’ll plug in your webcam and set up a motion detector with an alarm and find out what the other computers on your Wi-Fi network are up to. Once you’ve mastered the techniques, we’ll combine them with a battery pack and GPS for the ultimate off-road spy kit.
Table of Contents (7 chapters)
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Setting up point-to-point networking


When you take your headless Pi outside into the real world, chances are you'll want to communicate with it from a netbook or laptop from time to time. Since you won't be bringing your router or access point along, we need a way to make a direct point-to-point connection between your Pi and the other computer.

Creating a direct wired connection

As there won't be a DHCP server to hand out IP addresses to our two network devices, what we want to do is assign static IP addresses on both the Pi and the laptop. We can pick any two addresses from the private IPv4 address space we saw in the Mapping out your network with Nmap section in Chapter 4, Wi-Fi Pranks - Exploring Your Network. In the following example, we'll use 192.168.0.199 for the Pi and 192.168.0.200 for the laptop. These are the steps to create a direct-wired connection on Raspbian Jessie:

  1. Type in the following command on the Pi to open up the DHCP client configuration:

    pi@raspberrypi ~ $ sudo nano...
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