This gun is by no means subtle and was created by modifying a Nerf N-Strike Recon CS-6. Added to that is an MP3 player and amp for sound effects, a flash unit and 50-turn copper spool. The completed gun, including accupack, chips, LEDs, paint, and primer, cost around 50 Euros (US$72) to construct and mainly came from old or broken devices.
Monday, December 28, 2009
Rfiddler
RFID tags are making their way into more and more devices. Hotels use them for room access cards, passports have them embedded, and retailers are starting to use them to track goods in store. Whether you like these tracking chips being used or not more of them are appearing, so some enterprising hacker has come up with a solution: the RFID zapping gun called the Rfiddler.
This gun is by no means subtle and was created by modifying a Nerf N-Strike Recon CS-6. Added to that is an MP3 player and amp for sound effects, a flash unit and 50-turn copper spool. The completed gun, including accupack, chips, LEDs, paint, and primer, cost around 50 Euros (US$72) to construct and mainly came from old or broken devices.
This gun is by no means subtle and was created by modifying a Nerf N-Strike Recon CS-6. Added to that is an MP3 player and amp for sound effects, a flash unit and 50-turn copper spool. The completed gun, including accupack, chips, LEDs, paint, and primer, cost around 50 Euros (US$72) to construct and mainly came from old or broken devices.
Labels:
RFID,
Rfiddler,
USB drives
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