Quote from: bogben on April 16, 2012, 07:17 pmQuote from: cacoethes on April 15, 2012, 05:36 pmThanks y'all, I appreciate the comments!Bogben, if you'd like to use this setup you might want to try this:My laptop wouldn't boot from its built- in card reader no matter what I tried, but it will boot from USB. So I found a cheap Targus card reader at Wally World for less than ten bucks that plugs into a USB port, installed Liberte on the micro SD card, and put the card into the Targus reader.I set the BIOS to boot from USB (FDD in my BIOS), just like if using a thumb drive, and my laptop boots and runs from the micro SD card as flawlessly as it does a thumb drive.My first computer had a 500MB hard drive. The next one had 3 gigs. I look at this tiny little chip all the time and marvel that it can hold ~ 4gigs of data. So easy to hide, so easy to destroy...Thanks! I have never tried booting from a micro SD card, either in the card reader or in the USB port.I had a thought while coming home from work today, (well actually I just remembered someone else's good idea :p) - why not store all the sensitive information in a message to yourself in Tormail, it should be encrypted with PGP. For the more paranoid out there you can always encrypt with symmetric encryption with PGP and THEN with a Public key (with the corresponding private key stored in a separate Tormail.Perhaps that's going a little far though :pGood to see Liberte getting some attention, it should be a prerequisite for this site.Liberte is certainly ideal for beginners as it's easy to set up and use and you can't install any extra programs which might compromise your privacy. It does however have some drawbacks such as not letting you have your own BTC wallet software and not everyone likes the Claws e-mail client. If you're going to store sensitive information on Tormail, even if it's encrypted I would suggest having a separate e-mail account just for this - if someone seized your computer they could discover your usual e-mail address and private key, meaning your best defence would lie in anonymity.V.