Posts Tagged ‘WiFi’

Cisco Linksys E3000 Dual Band N Router Unboxing

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

Unboxing a Cisco Linksys E3000 High-Performance Wireless-N Router. It features simultaneous dual band meaning it provides two independent wireless networks (2.4GHz and 5GHz). It includes a built-in 4-port gigabit ethernet switch for wired devices. Also there is a USB port for external storage devices that can be seen by any computer on the network(s). Lastly, it houses “smart” antennas internally as to keep with the router’s sleek design.

How to set up a linksys router with any macintosh

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

This works with any mac if you have any questions please leave a comment or message me.

How to connect to a secured Linksys router using a DSi

Sunday, March 7th, 2010

LOOK FIRST IF YOU HAVE A LINKSYS WRT54G2 WIRELESS-G BROADBAND ROUTER BEFORE WATCHING THIS!!! THE BUTTON I MEAN: www.youtube.com Don’t ask me questions that it doesn’t work on the DS and DS Lite, because this only works for the dsi. This is my first video, so give me some credit, plz… (Note: U can’t play DS-games this way, but u can use the dsi-shop to get ndsi-browser for free, and play a bit with that, and system updates u can get.) Step by step: 1. Turn your dsi on 2. Go to system settings 3. Go 2 times to the right 4. Touch Internet 5. Touch Connection Settings 6. Touch Advanced Setup 7. Touch a “None” 8. Touch the picture of Wi-Fi protected setup 9. Press the red circled button u saw in the video on your router and hold it until it says: setup complete or something like that 10. U did it!!! Note: This video is copyrighted by Gamer1120!!!

Linux / Win7 – VMWare – USB Wifi Linksys – 2of2 – Windows 7 and Back Track 4 – Tips Tricks Hacks

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

pc-addicts.com – 2of2 – I briefly demonstrate how to use a Linksys USB Wireless-G device with Back Track 4 running on Windows 7 Pro _ _____ ______ http ———- Sign up today! twitter.com — Follow us on Twitter snipurl.com —— 24/7 live chat greatshark.net ———– IRC http —— Facebook ______ _____ _

LinkSys WRT310N Wireless N+’ Router Unboxing

Saturday, January 9th, 2010

In this CitronTech video, I will be unboxing the LinkSys WRT310N wireless N+’ router. This router is known to have great speeds and a great, reliable connection. The router is actually making my network card light up in red but I managed to figure out, the reason for that is that its transferring to it at a blistering 1000MB/S (1GB/S) not 100MB/S and the 10/100/1000MB/S connections all have different colors via. LED on the back so that is awesome :-) The router is great, has a great design …

SMEs Can Realize Greater Profits from Tpad’s Powerful Hosted IP PBX Communication Solutions

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

What is the major challenge facing small and medium-sized enterprise today? In a nutshell, it’s remaining viable in an increasingly competitive marketplace. While attention must be given to the marketing strategies of the major competitors of a company, at the heart of the matter is customer satisfaction. Invariably, it’s the company that provides the highest level of proactive response to their client’s needs that will come out on top.Tpad’s hosted IP PBX services are geared to provide flexibility in the way companies can access and use communication services. This is not only reduce the response time to clients, but to increase the level of productivity organization wide, whether the employees are stationary in the office or mobile, working from a remote location.This type of communication power was beyond the reach of many companies due to the high level of start-up costs for a state-of-the-art system. Now businesses using Tpad’s hosted IP PBX enjoy hassle-free communications with a phone system that is monitored with around the clock, supported by a Server Room fully equipped with the most advanced communication equipment and software.

Companies can realize a tremendous level of cost savings from reduced training time for personnel as well as equipment investment. With Tpad’s global phone network technical expertise at your disposal, there is no delay in access; your hosted IP PBX system will be operational from the first day of installation. However companies using Tpad’s hosted IP PBX system have another advantage; new software features are added to their call management software the moment they become available, removing the anxiety of large capital equipment upgrades as the communication needs of your business evolves. There are no hidden charges or fees, you simply select the “extensions” you need to add to your current system and pay accordingly. The total amount of savings using Tpad’s services compared to other providers can be greater than you realize. Steve Smart, the Managing Director of Tpad, sums up the benefits of hosted IP PBX this way:“Tpad offers businesses the ability to save a significant amount of money in their Call Costs using the hosted IP PBX system, by allowing free calls to other Tpad extensions to any destination in the world. Using Tpad’s hosted IP PBX system, companies can have superior call quality, flexibility and increased productivity without the expense of renting PSTN trunk lines.”The other advantage for using this communication solution is portability. With traditional PSTN numbers, if your company changed locations you would be unable to keep the same telephone number. The hosted IP/PBX system from Tpad provides you with a Personal Number or Extension that is not tied to your geographic location, ensuring your privacy and professionalism.With so many communication device options available today, businesses need communication solutions are fully compatible with any device. Tpad’s hosted IP PBX system works with Wi-Fi mobile phones, softphones and ATAs to give you the widest range of ways to manage your business communications. To discover how much money you can save, contact the Tpad client management support team at: +44 (0) 845 1221746 or complete our customer enquiry form online at: http://www.tpad.com/business/.About Tpad (http://www.tpad.com):Tpad, the world’s most flexible communications company, offers next-generation telephony solutions for consumers and businesses. Tpad is a true global VoIP network and offers users a wide range of VoIP / SIP devices (Softphones, ATAs, IP phones or WiFi mobiles) to make free or low cost calls anywhere in the world with crystal clear quality. Tpad’s new telephony services make it easier and cheaper for people to stay in touch using any device, on any network, anytime, anywhere. The ever-expanding global IP telephony company is headquartered in the UK with offices in the UAE.Tpad is a registered service mark of Tpad, Ltd. All other trademarks and trade names are the property of their respective owners.

Global ITSP VoIP ProviderTpad specialise in free and low cost calls anywhere in the World. Tpad offer a free SIP Number and voicemail when you create an account. Make International calls at local rate prices in over 40 countries. You can also make free WiFi mobile to mobile calls using Fring. Business customers can also benefit from Tpads custom made managed or hosted IP PBX solutions.
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Linksys WRT54G2 Wireless-G Broadband Router From Linksys Review

Friday, November 20th, 2009

astore.amazon.com The Linksys Wireless-G Broadband Router is really three devices in one box. First, there`s the Wireless Access Point, which lets you connect both screaming fast Wireless-G (802.11g at 54Mbps) and Wireless-B (802.11b at 11Mbps) devices to the network. There`s also a built-in 4-port full-duplex 10/100 Switch to connect your wired-Ethernet devices together. Connect four PCs directly, or attach more hubs and switches to create as big a network as you need. Finally, the Router …

Wi-fi Security Crisis

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

There’s a storm brewing, and although we have only seen the first signs, she’s gonna be a whopper! I’m talking about what I call the “Wi-Fi Security Crisis”, and if you don’t know what it is, better read on…
Q: Would you let a terrorist walk in off the street and call their buddies in Iran or Afganistan using your phone?
Q: Would you allow a pervert to use your Internet connection to download child pornography?
Q: If you are a hotel General Manager, would you knowingly allow a thief to steal the data from a guest’s computer?
EVERY DAY, this and much more happens at Wi-Fi hotspots around the world, but nobody seems too concerned about it — WHY?
Some recent examples:
1. A US Military wardriving team finds an access point installed on the base granting open, unencrypted, unrestricted access to the internal US Military unclassified network. The access point is accessible from a K-Mart parking lot outside the military base.
2. A six-page, full-color article in Russia’s “Hacker Magazine” describes in complete, step-by-step detail how to attack hotspots of three Moscow Marriott Hotels operated by MoscomNET.
3. Recent prosecution of a man for posession of child pornography. His defense that “he had an open access point so it must have been someone else” failed, and he’s now looking at doing some hard time playing drop-the-soap with the other inmates.
Open, insecure access points aren’t the only threat, but they make a great entry point. Just drive around with NetStumbler and see how many access points still have the default D-Link or Linksys SSID and even the default username and password for administrative access and you can have a small sample of the scope of just one of the problems.
Even if the hotspot has reasonable measures to protect unauthorized users from accessing the Internet, few operators bother protecting legitimate users from intra-site attacks. Once the attacker can associate with an access point — any access point — they can begin port-scanning and attacking any users associated with the same access point, and most often, users associated with any access point in the entire hotspot — all without needing any connectivity through the gateway.
Insecure, unpatched client computers are juicy targets for data thieves, or anyone wishing to implant key loggers, root kits or any other malware. Such computers are all too easily found with simple, freely downloadable scanning and analysis tools. On the Internet, stolen identities are bought and sold like so much coffee.
Interestingly enough, when interviewing one of the major European authentication providers in preparation for writing another article, when asked what his company was doing about security, his response was, “We don’t worry much about it, the only hackers are in Russia…”
For operators with these attitudes, the wake-up call may be coming sooner than they think. Just go to Google Video and search for Wi-Fi, war driving or wireless hacking and you will find videos with step-by-step demonstrations on exactly how to do it and what tools to use.
Hotels represent a unique problem. Most hotel IT Managers are ill equipped to understand let alone respond to the dangers wireless networks present. If the hotel is relying on a third-party operator to run their hotspot, the hotel IT Manager won’t have access or control of that network and couldn’t apply additional security even if they wanted to.
This is the case in Moscow where the three Marriott hotels rely on third-party operator MoscomNET to operate their hotspots. What baffles me is why virtually nothing has been done to secure the network since August 2006, when the Hacker Magazine article was published? To this very day, from the hacker’s perspective, nothing has changed and the same vulnerabilities are still wide open.
One major flaw in the Marriott/MoscomNET Wi-Fi system is that they are still using MAC-address-based authentication. Such systems are wonderful for ‘ease-of-use’ but a total disaster with regards to security. (MAC addresses are the simplest thing in the world to harvest and spoof.)
For example, at the Moscow Marriott Aurora hotel, I borrowed a Wi-Fi adapter for my notebook computer, plugged it in and had instant, free access to the WiFi network. How did that happen? Very simple, the guest who borrowed the adapter before me returned it while time still remained on his account. The MAC address from the adapter automatically authenticated me to the system — no other credentials required.
And what if I did something evil, such as setting up a P2P server pirating music? As I had never puchased an account, the previous user of the account would receive the blame. As for attackers just capturing MAC addresses out of the air and spoofed them — they are completely untracable and can do whatever they want with complete impunity.
Who can be held responsible and accountable? Hotel General Managers? Hotspot operators? IT Managers? Authentication and roaming partners? There is plenty of blame to go around, but nobody wants to take responsibility or action.
As another example, I recently offered to give a free hotspot security analysis, seminar and consultation to six of the five-star hotels in the city of St. Petersburg Russia. I contacted the General Managers directly, and got not a single reply to take me up on the offer. This tells me loud and clear that hotel GMs either don’t understand that there is a problem or will not admit it. It seems the safety and security of the guest’s computer or any other security matters are of no concern.
Is the problem a technical one? Not at all! Every commercial-grade access point is easily secured with WPA or WPA-2. (Forget about WEP.) Newer commercial access points allow simultaneous dual-mode operation — where the user can choose to associate insecurely or securely. This simple measure could reduce the risk of wireless eavesdropping to near zero. Only clients whose computers were incapable of operating in the secure mode would remain vulnerable.
So why don’t hotspot operators implement even minimal security precautions? I suspect it could be:
1. Many WiFi operators simply lack the knowledge, skills and experience to properly secure and monitor their networks.
Let’s face it, setting up a couple of access points to share an Internet connection isn’t rocket science — but properly securing and managing even a small system does require knowledge, skills and experience well beyond the capability of the local ‘computer guy’.
2. Wi-Fi hotspot operators who are more concerned about profit than security.
Secure systems ARE harder to manage and harder to use — which is another reason commercial operators are less likely to implement even the most basic of security measures. Real security would mean implementing encryption all the way from the client to the Gateway, and secure authentication — likely implemented through a Public Key Infrastructure and digital certificates.
Of course I realize that some client systems can not support certain security mechanisms, but at least give the client the option of borrowing supporting equipment and/or notifying them of the potential hazards they could be exposed to.
The next article in this series will focus on specific forms of attack on Wi-Fi networks in more detail. For a copy, simply send an email to the author (marty .at. milette.com) with your request and you will be sent the article the moment it becomes available.

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What is a Wifi Internet Phone?

Friday, October 16th, 2009

For long, free services like Skype have been associated with Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) — i.e., using your computer and a broadband internet line to make long-distance phone calls. Basically, what you used to pay for before came to you for free.

However, the main problem with such a service was, you had to be connected to a computer to place the call, and be right there for the duration of the call. Sort of like the ‘landline’ — you could move around, but you couldn’t move away. So VoIP, despite its usefulness, was not portable.

That was until companies like Netgear, UTStarcom, ZyXEL and Linksys decided to do something about it — They built WiFi phones.

With WiFi phones, VoIP could go portable. So no more computers required, and you could move around (or away) while you talk, and still be ‘online’.

WiFi phones are like cell phones. But instead of using regular carriers like Cingular or Nextel, they use Internet-friendly WiFi networks, and open protocols like SIP, to place your calls.

Unlike a regular phone that transmits voice in the analog form (as is, without converting them), WiFi phones convert your voice into a digital format and transmit them as packets of binary data to a wireless receiver. The receiver then passes the information over the Internet to the call processor. Throughout the process, IP addresses are used in the place of phone numbers to initiate, connect and end the call. These IP addresses act as direction maps for your call — just like when you log on to the Internet and type a web address go to a site.

The concept of WiFi phones (and the associated technology) is still quite new. The preference so far has been to use wifi-enabled laptops and smartphones to log on to a local “hotspot” — maybe at a Starbucks or a city mall — and surf the Internet wirelessly. Using a similar system to make voice calls at lower than market rates (even free) in a city-wide zone, is still in a nascent stage.

But the fact remains that WiFi is a simple, efficient and economical technology. It’s also downright brilliant. Why? Because it has strong roots in digital convergence — the idea of combining as one many of the functions, protocols, services and standards that baffle us, and offering a core solution for simplifying technology itself, a need echoed by today’s multitasking world. And as this technology grows and its pluses sink in, it’s only a matter of time before WiFi becomes the de facto choice and centerpiece of mobile communication.

Nat Jay is actively involved with trends in the cell phone industry. Get his latest recommendations at http://www.freewebs.com/lookfirst
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Internet Access Types

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009

In this article you will learn that what are the major internet access types and how these internet access method works. Following is a brief overview of the major internet communication methods.

DSL

Digital Subscribers Lines is an advanced technology for bringing high speed internet connection to the home and corporate users. DSL doesn’t require the new wiring because it can be used on the regular telephone lines. With DSL you can use your internet connect and use telephone for making phone calls at the same time.

ADSL

ADSL (Asynchronous Digital Subscribers Lines) is a high speed internet connection that is used to send and receive data at very high speed over the conventional telephone lines. ADSL supports data rate of 1.5 MBPS to 9 MBPS when receiving data (downstream) and 16 to 440 KBPS when sending data over internet (upstream)

Cable Net

Cable modems are copper wire are used to high speed access to the internet. Coaxial cable is used by the TV provides much greater bandwidth than the regular telephone lines. Cable modem provides the broadband internet access. Cable modem is a network bridge that conforms to IEEE 802.1D for Ethernet networking with some modifications. Some cable modem devices use Router to provide local area network with its own IP addressing. Some of the major manufacturers of the cable modem are Cisco, D-Link, Linksys, Motorola, Ericsson, Nortel Networks and 3Com.

Dial Up

Dial up communication is a type of internet access that works on the regular telephone lines. The computer is granted internet access by connecting the telephone line with the modem in the computer and configuring the computer with user name password and dial up numbers provided by the local ISP. Dial up service is least expensive but also provide the lowest internet speed. The dial up connection can be used with two types of modems internet modem and external modem.

GPRS

GPRS General Packet Radio Service is a series of functionalities that allow mobile data streaming and transfer to users of Global System. GPRS also called as 2.5 G. GPRS allows multiple users to share communication channel. GPRS facilitates the functionalities of web browsing, SMS, multimedia messages and real time email reception etc.

WiMAX

WiMAX stands for worldwide interoperability for Microwave access. WiMAX provides very high speed broadband internet connection to the home users, corporate users and the roaming users over wireless connection. WiMAX allows the data, voice and video communication at the same time. WiMAX connection can also be bridged and routed with the wired or wireless LAN. WiMAX provides data rate up to 70 mbps.

Satellite Internet access

Satellite Internet services are used in the locations where terrestrial internet access is not available. Satellite broadband is linked to the dish network subscriber service and provides data communication speed at the same rate of other broadband technologies. Two way satellite internet consists of two foot by three foot dish, two modems for uplink and downlink and coaxial cable between dish and modem.

B. Bashir manages Networking Tutorials and regularly writes articles on various topics such as Computer Networking, IP Address NetworkWireless Networking, Computer Hardware, Certifications, How Tos, Network Glossary Overviewand Computer tips.
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