




Archos 605 WiFi Hacked 102
Nathan Ramella writes "The ARCwelder project has released a technique dubbed 'Go Fighting Tabby!' which exploits an unquoted system() call through the Archos UI, providing the ability to execute arbitrary code with root access on the Archos 605 WiFi. In doing so, opening the platform up for further hacking. The Archos 605 WiFi runs embedded Linux on an ARM processor, but employs a variety of anti-hack techniques to keep users from modifying its firmware and operating system. Included is a cross-compiled sshd with configuration files to allow for passwordless ssh access to the Archos when it is connected to a WiFi connection. Bricks ahoy!"
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The story posted as 2008 was ushered in?
The guy that thought he was clever saying happy new year on the first post of 2008?
Or myself, writing about the guy that commented on the story that was the first of 2008?
I think it's all pretty obvious! *hic*
Why not Nokia N800/810? (Score:5, Interesting)
Why wouldn't I want to support the company not going out of its way to make my life difficult if custom apps were what I were after?
-Isaac
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Not trying to be flippant here, but I've never heard of this Archos gadget and don't, after a cursory examination, understand why I'd prefer this thing to, say, a Nokia Maemo-based doodad like the N800 or N810? Same screen resolution, wifi, etc - ok, no internal hard drive - and I don't have to jailbreak it to load custom apps.
Why wouldn't I want to support the company not going out of its way to make my life difficult if custom apps were what I were after?
-Isaac
That depends on how you view the device. If you're looking for an internet tablet, the Archos is NOT for you. If you're looking for something you could store a huge library of stuff ready to play on your TV, the Archos would wipe the floor with the Nokia device. If the library of videos isn't interesting to you, then it's a non-choice.
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--4GB Flash with a SD slot (accepts SDHC cards)
--30GB HDD
--80GB HDD
--160GB HDD
I got the 4GB version. My collection of music files--at least the ones I'd want to carry around--isn't large enough to tax it (my last device was a 2GB+MiniSD Avayon MP85) and I was only halfway to filling its onboard memory). I'm also not carrying full DVD movies around, so my video storage needs are extremely light. All that and I didn't want a HDD device in the event it gets dropped.
---PCJ
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Excuse me, the link in the story pointed to the 30GB model. Note that the 160GB model seems to be more expensive. Note that 250GB USB powered hard drives are going for around $150 dollars now. The only thing I can see that the the Archos can do that the Nokia can't is act as a Digital Video Recorder. So, if that's what you want the Device for, then I guess Archos is your choice. If you want an open platform that does play videos, play audio files, browse the internet, do GPS mapping, do spreadsheets, word processing, plotting, book reading, ssh server, ssh client, Internet telephony, games, ect, the Nokia 770 is currently the best choice in the smallest package. Again, if I drop my external hard drive, I can always get another one. Drop your Archos hard drive player 5 times and see how well in operates. I have dropped my Nokia 770 at least 5 times with no ill effects.
Your Nokia device cannot hook up to a TV and an external drive will require more power. (Not to mention the added bulk of the whole shebang.) The Archos device is a movie player, the Nokia device gets you part of the way (and for a lot of people, that's probably enough.) there.
Re:Why not Nokia N800/810? (Score:4, Interesting)
Speaking about "why don't you buy" I am quite disappointed by the current offerings for this market (high end PDA/video player). High-end PDA market mid-2004 (!) specs (I think there are at least 5 devices that match more or less the specs below):
- WinCE/windows mobile (yes, it's M$ but if you need GPS maps for dodgy places this might be your only option - and nobody can complain about lack of apps, need to jailbreak anything, lack of SDK and so on - Hello Apple, are you listening?)
- wifi (with WPA from day 0)
- bluetooth
- usb host (yes you can use your usb stick or external drive)
- extremely sharp 640x480 display (the devices are much smaller compared to N800)
- dual expansion slot (CF and SD with CFIO and SDIO, you can add odd peripherals like TV tuner, ethernet card). And of course you can use the existing under-100$ 16GB CF card or the announced 32GB or 64GB CF cards
- 500-600+ MHz Intel CPU (non-x86). Twice as fast as what you get in most current devices. Forget youtube, that's peanuts-you can play 99% of the divxes and xvids you get DIRECTLY on the PDA without any conversion.
Again, the above specs are for mid-2004! Of course nobody cared at the time but it seems that the market is slowly picking up. However the dream device seems to be one of the new Intel ultra-small CPUs (x86 compatible) combined with one of these 30-80-160+GB hdds. And it will eventually come (or at least I hope so).
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display size (Score:2)
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Possible counter-attacks to myminicity link-spam (Score:3, Interesting)
I would think that it would be possible to try to DDoS the servers themselves by accessing URLs which seem OK but actually don't exist (e.g., take a link to a real myminicity and change the name of the city to a different random string each time). Of course, if the company running the servers is unscrupulous, it could always return ads for what should be 404's. But at the very least, attacking in this way doesn't encourage link
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Bruce Schneier often comments on the problem of these kinds of externalities. [schneier.com]
Active your TinyUrl preview! (Score:3, Informative)
(Maybe a checker could be integrated into Slashdot itself - it takes but a single HTTP connection to tinyurl.com to fetch the full address and you could cac
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Ditto, and more (Score:4, Informative)
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Unfortunately, in the embedded market there's a still enormous load of companies that can't make money if they can't be the only one entity on this planet to be able to sell a driver for some piece of hardware.
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These devices are mini COMPUTERS! If your MP3 player has screen or WiFi then it's obvious it can do more. It's more common that embedded devices just use a processing chip to do all their functions - no more paying for an MP3 decoder chip, MPEG decoder chip, etc. This makes it "easy" to do so much more with them. SO LET US DAMN IT.
Example: The DS. It shoul
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Re:Ditto, and more (Score:4, Informative)
IN RELATION TO THIS STORY
Reason: Unbeknownst to me, Archos has a content portal where you can rent movies and other content. This changes the environment of my post since I was under the assumption they just made MP3 players and did nothing else. With this licensed content they are probably under contract to protect it.
However, I still believe my post stands on its own when talking about other consumer devices. If anyone has any comments please post
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No no, wouldn't dream to interrupt your flow as you seem to be doing just fine all by yourself
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Making money is less about creating a good product and building good customer
relationships. It's about good timing. Have the right product at the
right time and at the right price point and you strike it rich. If your
timing is wrong, no amount of good product or service will save you.
But timing is ridiculously hard to predict. So instead of concentrating
of creating a good product that customers want, and supporting it
so t
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Yeah, I can certainly say that years ago when I bought an Archos Ondio mp3 player I quickly got fed up with the crappy interface. I'd largely stopped using the thing until I downloaded the open source Rockbox [rockbox.org] firmware. I was really shocked by how incredibly superior the functionality of Rockbox was to the fac
Great device (Score:1)
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The reason this (and most other consumer devices) do not allow for modifications is real simple. Anyone working with consumer electronics support knows exactly why. What do you do with someone that (a) denies modifying anything and (b) has some unexplicable problem. Do you hang up on them?
Do you have someone sit on the phone for an hour trying to figure out what the problem might be? After all, they are saying it wasn't modified so it might be some obscure bug that needs to be fixed.
Oh no! (Score:5, Funny)
Windows media DRM (Score:4, Informative)
AFAIK, if a device supports "protected windows media", they must comply to some drm security specs from microsoft. One requirement for example, is secure time (user should not be able to reset the device time or change to an earlier time), or that the rng/random seed used to generate keys is "good enough".
The sad thing is that this device uses linux, but archos is trying to "close" the system, because of a microsoft requirement.
I don't understand why companies _need_ to support drm'ed media. The Nokia N800 series is very, very open. I suppose it doesn't play drm'ed media, but who wants protected media, anyway? It can play all my mp3's, videos fine.
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Answer is Apple. The marketing droids have looked at the iTunes/AppleStore and decided that its complete featureset is an essential combination to have in any music device. What they are missing is that it is the iTunes superb ability to manage music collections which is the reason for Apple dominance, not the complete feature set and the iTunes store. Less than 0.1% of the music on iPods is from the iTunes Store. Unfortunately as quite often
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Got nothing to do with Apple (Score:2)
The timeline doesn't fit, either.
The iTunes Music Store opened at the end of 1Q 2003.
Windows Media DRM shipped in 1999.
By the time iTMS opened, Windows Media Player 9 had already been augmented by kernel components to prevent even driver-level acces
Re:Are they allowed to use Linux and close the sw? (Score:1)
Why they are so anti-modder . . . (Score:3, Interesting)
While I don't like this approach, it is understandable and I love my archos quite a bit so I'm willing to overlook it. Heck, if they'd give me the option of playing AAC on *my* model I'd shell out the extra cash for it.
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The only reason for keeping my Archos 605 (Score:3, Insightful)
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And then you say to the manufacturer, if you want more people like me to support you, open it up.
But people like you just bought 2 units. So why should the manufacturer bother opening it up?
Now, if people like you bought 0 units, but would buy 2 units if they were unlocked, tha
Vs the N810 (Score:3, Informative)
Decisions, decisions.
Yeah, I'm gonna have to go Nokia on this one. $299.00 n800 [tigerdirect.com]
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As it stands, my iPhone actually is a phone, plus a great web browser. I'll pass.
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From http://www.allaboutsymbian.com/features/item/Semi-Convergence_Can_you_have_your_cake_and_eat_it_with_the_Nokia_N800.php [allaboutsymbian.com]
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The N800 is large by necessity of having a fairly big screen, it would make a poor phone at that size.
You don't even need a Nokia phone, any bluetooth phone with 3g/gprs modem capability will work.
Security through obscurity isn't secure (Score:2, Interesting)
How many of these vulnerabilities are known only to black-hats?
The nice thing about open source is that both black- and white-hats will find the bugs sooner, and the time interval that the bug is exploitable and unpatched is likely to be shorter.
Remove the harddrive lock protection! (Score:2)
They are a bunch of wankers. The harddrive in my AV500 has developed a few errors, the only way I can use the unit is to leave 'dead' files covering the bad blocks and never delete or read them, I've contacted Archos about getting a new drive but they
Archos HW == Low Quality, Software Equally So (Score:3, Interesting)
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unquoted system() call (Score:1)
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An Entirely Different Reason (Score:1)
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'Go Fighting Tabby!' (Score:1)