Learn Kali Linux Episode #9: Kali Linux Installation
YouTube transcript, YouTube translate
A quick preview of the first subtitles so you know what the video covers.
Hello everybody and welcome to this tutorial. Today, I will continue with the installation of Kali Linux within a virtual environment. You might have noticed that I have two screens on which is written Kali Linux, and there are exactly the same except one has a bigger font and a zoomed in picture, so to say. So over here on the left side this is my virtual machine, the window which I'm moving now, this is the actual virtual machine, and the window on the right side that is just a zooming in app that I have installed in order for you to be able to better see what I am about to show you here. Primarily because I don't have guest additions installed on the virtual machine, and you cannot install them until you actually install the operating system first. Therefore, I can zoom in anything, I can perform any operations of a kind, and you can see that the font on the left side is rather small and a bit difficult to see. Therefore, I will perform the work there, on the left side, and you can monitor what I am doing on the right. There is no difference between left and right in terms of actions, only in terms of font size. Anyway, I'm just gonna go ahead and scroll down to install, press ENTER, that is what we want, and the installation procedure is under way. By the way, if you boot into the live version the password for the default password for root is just root in Reverse, so toor. Just a bit of a brief mention there, a bit of extra info, that I wanted to throw in there that might come in handy from time to time. Anyway, pick whatever language is suitable for you. You can also pick the uppermost option where it says C, no localization. So if you want a greater degree of anonymity, or something of a kind, you can even pick that, but for the sake of this tutorial there really isn't any need. And even if you do pick a language, I mean a lot of people pick English, so that will not footprint you, or anything of a kind. Just press ENTER and here you can actually choose a country, territory, or area. Well, I don't know you can choose whatever you want here. I'm just gonna go ahead and click UK because it immediately offers me a British keyboard that I use, so that's very nice in terms of settings, but again you could have chosen no localization and this you would not be asked any of these things. Well, for keyboard you probably would, but for the country, area, or anything of a kind you would not. In any case, even if you don't pick the right one here it doesn't matter. Later on after the installation you can configure it any way you like, but it's very nice to do it straight away. It saves a bit of work later on.