CODEX ENTRY: DX-119 HARDCASE D.I.P. (DATABASE INTEL PLATFORM)
Classification: Rugged portable computer, intrusion and data-exfiltration suite
Manufacturer: DARPA-led technical consortium with think-tank advisory assistance
Weight: 6.5 lb (2.95 kg)
Project Name: Black Bag
Overview
This aluminum-shelled, damage-resistant laptop is a purpose-built intrusion and data-handling platform for on-site operations. The chassis uses a thick anodized shell, reinforced hinges, and a rubberized drive bay to tolerate impact and vibration. The system is designed to penetrate and copy electronic hard drives on hostile or otherwise protected systems. It carries a local suite of exploitation tools, encryption utilities, and file management scripts that enable rapid access, silent copying, and optional source destruction on target systems.
A DARPA project connected to a number of clandestine government organizations, the DX-119 is considered an exceptionally advanced man-portable data recovery asset, meant to crack hardened and firewalled computer systems in an ever-changing and increasingly digital landscape. Among the more controversial aspects of the DX-119 is it's ability to mirror, mask and otherwise simulate proprietary operating systems, including blackboxed or otherwise commercially unavailable OS used by a number of modern governments. The cracking suite is exceptionally good at exploiting hardline vulnerabilities, and can seek out backdoors and weaknesses with enough uptime to bypass most conventional security measures. It has been noted that this process can be exceptionally 'loud', in that by using a brute force method hiding the fact that a system cracker was used is functionally impossible.
Fortunately it also comes with a number of destructive programs designed to cause massive overheating, overloading and scrambling of information that can be injected once the desired information is retrieved, making both recovery and investigation daunting tasks indeed.
Core Functions
Intrusion Toolkit: A curated library of local privilege escalation exploits, SMB and NetBIOS probes, password hash utilities, and legacy terminal access tools. Includes serial-console takeover methods for network gear and DOS service menus when available.
Auto-Routine Black Scripts: One-key sequences that identify the target operating system, attempt credential bypass, mount target storage over cable or bus, mirror selected directories, then securely wipe the source if the operator enables destruction. All actions write to a local audit log.
Encryption Suite: On-device public-key tools and symmetric ciphers with operator-selected key lengths. Whole-archive encryption for exfil sets. Supports encrypted containers and passphrase escrow to removable media.
Forensic Copy and Write-Block: Hardware-level write-block adapters for targeted buses to prevent contamination during capture. Sector-by-sector imaging and checksum verification for integrity.
Data Sanitation: Multi-pass overwrite, filename scrambling, and allocation table corruption routines for source drives when destruction is authorized. Local secure wipe for the laptop’s own temporary work space.
Integration Systems
Universal Data Cables: Bundled serial null-modem, parallel LapLink-type cable, SCSI-2 ribbon with adapters, PS/2 keyboard inline injector, RJ-45 10Base-T patch leads, RJ-11 for dial-up, and a set of service-header jumpers for board-level access on certain machines.
Removable I/O Cards: PCMCIA cards for 10Base-T Ethernet, hardware crypto acceleration, and optional USB 1.1 expansion where supported.
External Storage Bridges: PCMCIA-to-SCSI and parallel-to-IDE bridges to mount or image external drives without opening target cases.
Peripheral Support: PS/2 mouse and keyboard ports, VGA output for external monitors, and serial terminal profiles for routers and industrial controllers.
Security Features
Offline Operation: No default wireless emitters. Networking is cabled only and operator initiated.
Removable Media Discipline: All captures are written to removable media with optional one-time encryption keys.
Kill Routine: Hidden key combo cuts power, scrubs volatile memory, and locks the boot sequence behind an encrypted challenge.
Tamper Evident Seals: Port seals and bay screws are lacquered. Case open events are logged in hardware.
Limited Shielding: The case includes basic EMI shielding to reduce signature and protect from incidental electrical noise. It is not a guaranteed EMP-hardened platform.
Operational Use
The operator connects via the fastest compatible interface, runs a discovery scan, then selects either a silent mirror or a mirror-and-purge routine depending on mission goals. Typical tasks include cloning user directories, harvesting credential stores, imaging connected disks, and pulling configuration snapshots from network gear. When time is short, the black script performs a targeted grab of high-value locations, writes to encrypted removable media, and initiates source obfuscation before disconnection.
Maintenance Requirements
Inspect and rewrap cable jackets after each operation. Test PCMCIA cards monthly. Cycle batteries to maintain capacity and carry a spare pack and vehicle adapter. Keep drive bays dust free and clean the cooling path to avoid thermal throttling during long imaging tasks. Replace worn connector pins and verify checksums on archived tool sets after updates.
Known Limitations
Success rates depend on target age and configuration. Strong physical access controls, nonstandard file systems, or fully patched systems can blunt automated routines. Parallel and serial links are slow for full-disk imaging and may require extended dwell time. The unit’s shielding is limited and should not be relied upon against deliberate electromagnetic attack.
Technical Summary
CPU and Memory: Late-generation x86 mobile processor with expanded RAM for large-file handling
Display: 12.1-inch matte TFT, daylight readable
Storage: Shock-mounted internal drive with encrypted working partition; external media via PCMCIA and bridge adapters
Drives and Readers: 3.5-inch floppy drive, CD-R writer, PCMCIA flash adapters, USB 1.1 expansion via card where supported
Ports: 2× PCMCIA, RS-232 serial, IEEE-1284 parallel, PS/2 keyboard and mouse, VGA, RJ-45 10Base-T, RJ-11 modem, SCSI-2 through adapter
Power: Main battery with spare, AC adapter, 12-volt vehicle adapter
Operating Environment: 0 °C to 45 °C, splash resistant with sealed ports and gasketing
Designation Note
This platform is intended for quick black-bag entries where a single operator must gain access, copy priority data, and exit with an encrypted archive. It favors cable-based access, removable media control, and repeatable procedures over remote exploitation or noisy network presence.
AN: So we're a day late on this one, but damn did it fight me. Full disclosure I had to go ahead and lean on AI for the technical stuff because while I know enough about guns and a number of other things to be a danger to myself, computer design, the names of things, how they come together and how they work are a foreign language to me, so for those of you who actually know this stuff, please don't burn me at the stake if this all reads like gibberish. I know it does, but I also don't know enough to know how to make it better and frankly, this one consumed ALL of yesterday so it is what it is.
Rarely do I admit defeat but my original plan here was to grab some stuff from a few techy crime dramas and spy novels and cludge it all together but I realized the flaw in my plan when I realized I was so out of my depth I didn't even know what I didn't know to make this come together. I did still wanna do this one though, which is why I spent so much time trying and failing at it, because come on, super spy laptop is such a cool concept. Anyway, here you go. I hope you don't hate it.