As we have demonstrated through many of our previous tutorials, our SKUDO Kryptor board can be easily used with the Raspberry Pi board. This time we will show you how to use our SKUDO Kryptor board with an Arduino Nano (just for the sake of this demo but you can use any model).
In the previous tutorials, we learned how to connect and use this device with a Raspberry Pi board. Today, we will show how to use our SKUDO Kryptor with an Arduino Nano (just for the sake of this demo but you can use any model).
We are always very excited to put Kryptor to work on diverse use cases and this time we have been busy steaming encrypted audio files using Kryptor HSM FPGA. Imagine using it for sending encrypted voice messages or any other audio file that needs protection.
The goal with this tutorial is to familiarize with some simple but strong encryption procedures and to demonstrate how to connect the Kryptor HSM FPGA (www.skudo.tech/kryptor) to a Raspberry Pi, exchanging encrypted sensor data (everyone could replace this according to his/her own needs) between two Raspberry Pi’s.
This tutorial illustrates how to upload a new FPGA configuration file to the FPGA Kryptor boards using the custom Skudo JTAG cable and USB Blaster programming device (any Intel/Altera compatible device would work).
We envision a world where all digital communications are safe and private. We are dedicated to creating innovative best-in-class hardware solutions that protect data exchange with the highest level of security and privacy.