![]() ![]() I’m not 100% sure what I’m doing here but I’m trying only a micro instance with Ubuntu 16.04. ![]() ![]() I then created a new project and a Compute Engine VM. If anyone reading struggles here though and the help pages don’t answer your questions feel free to comment and ask questions.įirst thing was to signup to Google Cloud Platform’s free trail. ![]() I’m not really documenting this part of the process very extensively as they’re just visual web forms which are fairly self explanatory to complete and this would just be a series of screenshots which I don’t want to do. I also want to keep myself educated about the various technologies in use so this seemed like a good opportunity to test out EOTK, have a play with Google’s free introduction to their cloud services, and do all of this separately to my existing Tor installation (which works well as is - I didn’t want to risk breaking my configuration with another toolset). There are political considerations in using Google’s (or Amazon’s etc.) cloud platforms and I’m not agnostic towards such politics. Still I wanted to share my own experiences of trying out this tool and deploying it using Google’s cloud infrastructure. I won’t share any details of the project as Kevin will be talking about that at some point, in the future, as appropriate. I hadn’t planned this as I’m currently a) meant to be completing a PhD funding application, b) should be trying to find a job and c) trying to focus on music related things rather than tech for a little while.Īnyway, got me intrigued by the Enterprise Onion Toolkit (EOTK) as he’s got a project requiring it and wanted me to help look at it with him. So at the risk of this site mostly being tech stuff I’m posting another how-to, rough-guide, self-documentation regarding Tor. ![]()
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