diff --git a/doc/EN/mesh_images.org b/doc/EN/mesh_images.org index 0a3833da..8646716e 100644 --- a/doc/EN/mesh_images.org +++ b/doc/EN/mesh_images.org @@ -45,7 +45,7 @@ wget https://freedombone.net/downloads/current/freedombone-meshclient-i386.img.x wget https://freedombone.net/downloads/current/freedombone-meshclient-i386.img.xz.sig gpg --verify freedombone-meshclient-i386.img.xz.sig sha256sum freedombone-meshclient-i386.img.xz -376668ae375518af268d67b9ccb7ab7b2c2787b445c125f61487ff97950092e8 +3e88205461bb2061dc172ff0a1e65e5cae1013f8f7dc26c6d5cbe1c986c98555 unxz freedombone-meshclient-i386.img.xz sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdX bs=1M count=8 sudo dd bs=1M if=freedombone-meshclient-i386.img of=/dev/sdX conv=fdatasync @@ -61,7 +61,7 @@ wget https://freedombone.net/downloads/current/freedombone-meshclient-insecure-i wget https://freedombone.net/downloads/current/freedombone-meshclient-insecure-i386.img.xz.sig gpg --verify freedombone-meshclient-insecure-i386.img.xz.sig sha256sum freedombone-meshclient-insecure-i386.img.xz -81098572ac522b543f2c015dd0819d27c290b93b771efc9de6e93742e3981daf +09c059664daf56d210134735d37e8117bb7b755acc8b9b253cdfa42052249ccb unxz freedombone-meshclient-insecure-i386.img.xz sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sdX bs=1M count=8 sudo dd bs=1M if=freedombone-meshclient-insecure-i386.img of=/dev/sdX conv=fdatasync diff --git a/website/EN/mesh_images.html b/website/EN/mesh_images.html index 4215d387..9a01bbc0 100644 --- a/website/EN/mesh_images.html +++ b/website/EN/mesh_images.html @@ -3,7 +3,7 @@ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
- +There may be situations where you need to write the same disk image to multiple drives at the same time in order to maximize rate of deployment. In the instructions given below the dd command is used for writing to the target drive, but to write to multiple drives you can use a tool such as GNOME MultiWriter.
@@ -280,9 +280,9 @@ The MultiWriter tool is also available within mesh client images, so that you caRouters are intended to build network coverage for an area using small and low cost hardware. You can bolt them to walls or leave them on window ledges. They don't have any user interface and their only job is to haul network traffic across the mesh and to enable peers to find each other via running bootstrap nodes for Tox and IPFS. Copy the image to a microSD card and insert it into the router, plug in an Atheros wifi dongle and power on. That should be all you need to do.
It's better not to trust images downloaded from random places on the interwebs. Chances are that unless you are in the web of trust of the above GPG signatures then they don't mean very much to you. If you actually want something trustworthy then build the images from scratch. It will take some time. Here's how to do it.