From: Paul on 1 Oct 2005 01:01 Steve, Just a quick message, another scouting weekend is up in a few hours. In a spare hour later today I intend to check out the friendly neighbor's ADSL connection and try my unencrypted setup to see if I'll have any trouble with the distance. It's a clear line of sight for some 100 meters so that shouldn't be the hardest challenge. If it is, I might try and build some of these pringle antennas. Could you describe your setup? Do you also use two of these LC00070 configured as in the picture in the manual? If so: what distance do you cover? Would you be willing to try my settings, if and where needed tweak them and return any improvements you made? I could email the files to you directly and add a little description of what they look like. JOTA is the Jamboree On The Air. A Jamboree is a Scouth gathering and this one is 'on the air'. Every 3rd full weekend in October Scouts and Amateur Radio operators get together, typically the Ham sets up his equipment in the Scout club house, enabling the Scouts to talk to each other by radio to the other end of town but as easily worldwide. Every year over 500,000 Scouts and lots of Hams paricipate in the biggest worldwide scouting event, ten times more participants than any other kind of Jamboree ever held. Combined with the JOTA since some years is the JOTI, or Jamboree On The Internet. This year my group intends to participate in both, JOTI for the first time. Obvious prerequisite is an Internet connection, hence the mission impossible I seem to have embarked upon ;) Paul "Steve Berry" <reachnet(a)hotmail.com> schreef in bericht news:9cj%e.9823$DO.8572(a)newsfe3-gui.ntli.net... > Paul, > > Yip, MAC+1 sounds about right. > > At the minute I'm using WEP ( I know it sucks-better to use WPA ), but the > client cards I use don't support AES, although they do TKIP ( cheap > again ). I *believe* there's a performance hit when using TKIP that AES > doesn't suffer, I've just decided just to leave it at boring-old WEP at > the minute, till I get time to look at it. > Funnily enough these routers as advertised don't even mention support for > WPA only 64/128 bit WEP, although the router interface supports WPA/PSK - > guess that's what happens with cheapo (Chinese) works in progress..They're > also running SMC Barricade (embedded) of you're interested. > > Err.. pardon me for being ignorant but what's JOTA ??? > What, you want my config settings so's you can jump on a boat with your > laptop to the UK, drive half-way up the country and hack me silly ?? ;) > > I'd suggest just starting off with basic 64 bit/WEP and one (sort of > randomish) 10-digit hex key on each router. Use chars if you prefer. > Enter the same key on XP manually (which I assume you're running) - the > Sweex won't dish them out. Open Network Auth/WEP data encryption. > Obviously you only really need to do this for the bridge, but you might > want to do it for the AP too, depending on your setup. > Then just progress upwards to the encryption level you're happy with. > > If you want to send me your settings feel free - consultancy fee 500,000 > UKP. He..he... ;) > > S
From: Steve Berry on 1 Oct 2005 08:49
"Paul" <paul_joosten.no(a)spam.hotmail.com> wrote in message news:9137c$433e1892$513b43d8$16639(a)news.versatel.nl... > Steve, > --Snip-- > > Could you describe your setup? Do you also use two of these LC00070 > configured as in the picture in the manual? If so: what distance do you > cover? Pretty much. The signal strength on these is pretty awful though. I'm actually using these in a house. The Cable modem "external router" is in another room ( about 50 feet away ) and I can't even see it normally. Reflector is a good idea. Would you be willing to try my settings, if and where needed tweak > them and return any improvements you made? I could email the files to you > directly and add a little description of what they look like. As you've pointed out, you can backup the settings, but you can't restore them ! Who's idea was that ???. Just sending the files won't do any good - if you look at them with a hex editor, they're just filled with nulls "FFFF". If you want to pursue this email me and we'll discuss it. > > JOTA is the Jamboree On The Air. A Jamboree is a Scouth gathering and this > one is 'on the air'. Every 3rd full weekend in October Scouts and Amateur > Radio operators get together, typically the Ham sets up his equipment in > the Scout club house, enabling the Scouts to talk to each other by radio > to the other end of town but as easily worldwide. Every year over 500,000 > Scouts and lots of Hams paricipate in the biggest worldwide scouting > event, ten times more participants than any other kind of Jamboree ever > held. Combined with the JOTA since some years is the JOTI, or Jamboree On > The Internet. This year my group intends to participate in both, JOTI for > the first time. Obvious prerequisite is an Internet connection, hence the > mission impossible I seem to have embarked upon ;) Err... thanks. I was never in the Scouts so that's useful info that will stay with me for the rest of my life ! ;) Dib..dib..dib.. n' all that. ;) > > Paul > > "Steve Berry" <reachnet(a)hotmail.com> schreef in bericht > news:9cj%e.9823$DO.8572(a)newsfe3-gui.ntli.net... >> Paul, >> >> Yip, MAC+1 sounds about right. >> >> At the minute I'm using WEP ( I know it sucks-better to use WPA ), but >> the client cards I use don't support AES, although they do TKIP ( cheap >> again ). I *believe* there's a performance hit when using TKIP that AES >> doesn't suffer, I've just decided just to leave it at boring-old WEP at >> the minute, till I get time to look at it. >> Funnily enough these routers as advertised don't even mention support for >> WPA only 64/128 bit WEP, although the router interface supports WPA/PSK - >> guess that's what happens with cheapo (Chinese) works in >> progress..They're also running SMC Barricade (embedded) of you're >> interested. >> >> Err.. pardon me for being ignorant but what's JOTA ??? >> What, you want my config settings so's you can jump on a boat with your >> laptop to the UK, drive half-way up the country and hack me silly ?? ;) >> >> I'd suggest just starting off with basic 64 bit/WEP and one (sort of >> randomish) 10-digit hex key on each router. Use chars if you prefer. >> Enter the same key on XP manually (which I assume you're running) - the >> Sweex won't dish them out. Open Network Auth/WEP data encryption. >> Obviously you only really need to do this for the bridge, but you might >> want to do it for the AP too, depending on your setup. >> Then just progress upwards to the encryption level you're happy with. >> >> If you want to send me your settings feel free - consultancy fee 500,000 >> UKP. He..he... ;) >> >> S > > |