Canary Wireless Digital Hotspotter Reviewed
First, to clear up a misconception about Wi-Fi detectors in general: though they can be used to find and (usually illegally) hop onto someone else's wireless connection, that's not their only use. It's a pet peeve of mine to see technology vilified because it can be put to nefarious or even semi-nefarious use; in the case of hand-held wireless detectors, there are plenty of "non-infringing uses" to which they can be put. Troubleshooting in a house or office is one (wireless base station manufacturers sometimes claim coverage ranges that can charitably be called optimistic -- and even if their numbers represent a legitimate best guess, it seems that no house outside of Stepford is truly typical); making sure that your signal isn't reaching the general public (or is reaching the general public, depending on your inclinations and your ISP's Terms of Service) is another good use; so is finding which coffee shops have both drinks and wireless access. There's also counter-cracker vigilance -- making sure no one has installed a wireless router on your network without your permission.
On several cross-country trips, I've happily used an earlier-generation Wi-Fi finder -- Smart ID's WFS-1 -- to park intelligently at Flying J truckstops all over the United States; though hundreds of Flying J locations are set up as (subscription-based) wireless hotspots, the signal coverage is often haphazard, and it's more economical of time and battery life to spend a few minutes walking around with a hand-sized device than to keep trying new parking spots and consulting the signal meter on a laptop. Even if you have an 802.11-equipped handheld, offloading the task of signal detection (and, if you can, keeping 802.11 off unless there's a connection available) will save your battery a few percentage points.
My first impressions of the device were positive. It arrived in the hated plastic-clamshell packaging, but -- unlike some products -- didn't require a utility knife or dueling pliers to extract. The instructions are blessedly simple, and all fit on the back of the package insert, about the size of a 3x5 index card. (This insert opens up, and I expected to find inside the usual birdseed barrage of legal flummery and useless warnings, right down to "Don't feed this device to babies" -- all nicely absent. Simple product, simple instructions: magic.) The device is a medium grey, with the display located just below the centerline and its lone button in the lower left-hand corner. The required pair of AAA batteries is supplied in the package. (AAAs are nice -- much nicer than fiddly button cells at least; a single AA would be even better, though.)
Canary's device is the third Wi-Fi detector I've tried; Kensington's first-generation key-fob device was the first, but that one has forfeited its place in my toolkit: compared to the others, it is neither as sensitive nor as discriminating in the signals it picks up (neon lights all seem to set it off) and has a less informative display to boot, just three LEDs. (And it seemed the only way I could get all the LEDs to light strongly was to place the thing directly on top of a wireless router.)
Smart ID's four-LED meter may not seem a huge leap up from that, but compared to Kensington's, the WFS-1 is both more sensitive and more directional in its pickup, so those four LEDs actually convey more than a third more information than the Kensington's three. The WFS's more pronounced directionality (even compared to the Canary unit) and simpler display means it still has an important adjunct role for quickly finding the source of a signal.
One thing to note: Canary's take on the Wi-Fi detector, at 4.5 ounces, is the chunkiest one I've seen; it's solid-feeling (read: "surprisingly hefty") and squat -- about twice as thick as Smart ID's, and much fatter than Kensington's. The back is curved, though, making it comfortable to hold, if not to jam in a jeans pocket, and it's only about two inches tall.
To use the Hotspotter, there are only two things you need to know: 1) Hit the little grey button to scan for local wireless networks; if one is located, the screen will display in sequence four pieces of information: the network name, a signal-strength readout (one to four bars), "Secure" or "Open" to indicate whether the signal is encrypted, and the channel number of the detected signal. 2) To scan for more networks, hit the button again. (So it's really more like one and a half things.) The initial scan takes 8-10 seconds; subsequent ones are much faster.
Canary claims the Hotspotter should work up to about 200 feet (with a clear line of site, outdoors); I can confirm that it works to at least nearly that distance with the router in our house, but sight lines and property lines conspire to prevent me from reaching the full 200 feet.
I'm in Seattle's Capital Hill neighborhood at the moment, a target-rich environment if ever one was, and I took the Hotspotter along on a walk to Victrola, a very nice wireless-equipped coffee shop down the street, to see what it said about the neighborhood.
The answer is unsurprising, but something to keep in mind if you'd like your own network to be used only by you: of the 33 unique networks I noted in a 6-block stroll, fully 16 of them were shown as "open" by the Hotspotter. (That doesn't necessarily mean they're wide open, though; see below.) 11 of the networks I encountered displayed common default SSIDs (Linksys, Netgear, Apple Net, and the hot-selling "default"), which with a little googling can yield default admin-interface IP addresses and passwords. While some of the nominally open networks might be employing MAC-based security, I think it would be a conservative bet that well over half of them are simply open to all comers. Is yours?
(There may have been more base stations than the ones I could distinguish, because the coverage clouds overlap so much; I discarded some of the discovered networks as probable duplicates. By walking fast, I may also have missed some in the thickest sections.)
I've come up with only a few niggling objections to the device -- just quirks, really, but they're worth laying out:
First quirk: For some reason, on its initial scan (that is, on being powered up from the Off state), the Canary device usually fails to detect the house network, though scanning again immediately has always found it. This is a trivial point, for one big reason: you'll have to hit the scan button again anyhow to scan for multiple networks.
The second quirk is one I hope is fixed on the Mark II version: the absence of a backlight. Unlike the other contenders in this niche, all of which are based on LED displays, the Hotspotter has a 12-character LCD readout, which is what lets it display so much information in the first place. However, the display is difficult to read in anything but bright light, and useless in actual dark. An internal LED with its own button (or an EL backlight like Timex's Indiglo) would be a great improvement.
Lack of a backlight aside, the scrolling display requires more attention than the one-dimensional LED graphs of the competitors -- a fair trade-off for the additional information to be gleaned. However, it doesn't have to be a trade-off at all: I wish the signal strength aspect of the display was displayed on dedicated LEDs either instead of, or in addition to, the scrolling LCD display.
One more quibble, though it's getting close to looking a gift horse in the mouth: this detector will say whether a particular wireless signal is encrypted, but it can't say whether it's protected by other means. If you use MAC-based authentication, for instance (but not WEP), the signal would still show up as "open." It would be more accurate to label such signals "unencrypted" or "no crypto" rather than "open."
In short, the Hotspotter is my new favorite portable Wi-Fi finder, and handily tops the features of the competition: the WFS-1's stronger directionality and bright LEDs can't beat network identification and encryption status, so Canary's device moves up in line. It works well, is useful for multiple purposes, and provides all the functionality it's reasonable to expect from a $50 device the size of a nice piece of fudge. (And of course the great thing about favorites sometimes is waiting for them to be toppled.)
Does the Bush White House know about this? "Every Hotspot is a terrorist Hotspot."
"Wow. Now THAT'S a lot of angry Indians." - Lt. Col. George Armstrong Custer
Already posted my review a couple weeks ago as a comment in the original story comparing these devices. Here it is again.
Look at their website www.canarywireless.com for product images. This thing is really small, about the same width as a PCMCIA card, but about 3/4 to 1 inch shorter. It is about 1 inch thick though. It came well packaged, but after ordering on Sunday night, it took them until Wednesday evening to get it out the door with expedited shipping.
Press the one button, and it says "Wifi Detect" on the dot-matrix LCD screen and begins scanning. When it finds an AP, it scrolls the SSID, signal strength in bars, Secure or Open for WEP status, and Ch:__ (showing 1-11 or 1-13 depending on country I think).
It is reasonably sensitive... it picks up my roof mounted D-Link DWL-2700AP with WEP, shows three bars and "Secure". This is from the below-grade basement of a wood-framed house; the AP is on the top of the one-story peak roof on the other end of my house. The Hotspotter picks up the signal better than my laptops (or at least according to the ultra-subjective comparitive # of bars).
After you read the first result, press the button again and it says "Scanning". It will display the info for the next AP it can hear. And so on.
The "instruction" cardlet in the blister pack says it powers off in about 30 seconds, but it seems shorter than that... didn't time it though. When it powers itself down, it starts from the beginning again with the apparently strongest signal, you have to click back through again for more scans.
This device also picks up my neighbor's Apple Airport Extreme, while I am inside my front living room (wood frame construction) and his AE is inside his brick home. We are about 100 feet apart. Not bad through those materials. The device reads "Cloaked" because he has SSID turned off and WEP on, but it does show good sig strength and the correct channel (I know because I set it up). He gets his internet from my roof AP, into a stock (indoor) WET11 that feeds the WAN port on the AE.
Curiously it won't pick up my Linksys befw11s4 while scanning it from within the same room. It's open with SSID broadcast on. I've gone elsewhere in the house in case I am swamping the front end of this thing but no dice. Will test it another day on other Linksys devices I have elsewhere.
Anyways, it seems the feature set and signal sensitivity make it the choice of devices in this roundup.
IMHO.
Yes that's all well and good but is the device digitally signed?
Darn, Backordered, I guess that means they won't ship in time for xmas.
--alop
Just don't use it in a Lowe's parking lot.
First, to clear up a misconception about Wi-Fi detectors in general: though they can be used to find and (usually illegally) hop onto someone else's wireless connection, that's not their only use. It's a pet peeve of mine to see technology vilified because it can be put to nefarious or even semi-nefarious use; in the case of hand-held wireless detectors, there are plenty of "non-infringing uses" to which they can be put.
Duh, this device doesn't really help you connect to a network. It just tells you that one is there. Anyone with a laptop/PCMCIA card or a wifi CF card can "Stumble" onto any network with any number of WEP encryption cracking programs/MAC sniffers.
This device is a tool, plain and simple. To use it "nefariously" would be a waste of money.
I don't want to carry another PDA sized device in my laptop bag just to detect wifi networks. A key chain device seems to be the better form factor, even if it doesn't list the networks.
Damned commercial spammer.
-1 overrated, Timothy.
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There are products already in the field which are designed to keep the wireless network from leaking out of the building.
This product looks like it'll be good for tracing down those leaks.
A Palm T3 plus a PalmOne Wi-fi Card plus a NetChaser software. It works great, lots of details, can log the details of the access points found to file.
It's quite expensive if you want a wi-finder device and don't have a palm. But if you already have a palm with wi-fi, it's a cheap ($12.00) fun toy.
My Karma: ran over your Dogma
StrawberryFrog
There is a radar detector made by the Valentine One Company http://www.valentine1.com/ that tells you via an LED what kind of signal it's detecting AND from what general direction the signal is coming from: front, back, or sides. Wouldn't it be cool to have the Canary Wireless device do the same, so to indicate which coffee shop/restaurant has the signal so I can sit there, drink my java and work?
Does it run on linux?
(Please, if you feel compelled to answer me, realize that it's just a joke...)
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I merely tie a Pringles can to the foot of my canary, and let him fly.
My doesn't go on a keychain though, it is about the size of a credit card. More like a PCMCIA card sized. Oh, it IS a pcmcia card, and it requires that its plugged in to my laptop to work.
The only difference is that a) it doesn't go crazy when somebody turns on a microwave and b) it also lets me CONNECT to the network :)
Electrons are free; it is moving them that becomes expensive.
Are the drivers for it digitally signed?
Just what I need, another damn keychain...
What's the advantage over running a wireless detection app on my laptop or PDA? Why spend $50 on something when I already have a tool that works?
"I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey
I e-mailed the company if The Digital Hotspotter(TM) Model #HS10 was sold in any retail stores like Costco, Best Buy, Walmart, Circuit City, CompUSA, etc.
:)
I got a human reply quickly after 1.5 minutes: "We currently sell the product only online through our website."
--
My question to everyone: Are there any products like these sold in retail stores in Los Angeles, CA area? Any replies appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
Blah blah blah WARDRIVING blah blah blah. Wonder what is going to be under the tree this year again, boys and girls? Wi-Fi devices for you and for me!
Zhrodague.net - I do projects and stuff too.
I thought this was going to be an article about how someone attached a wireless access point to a canary, and now it was flying around randomly (and very, very briefly) giving people free wireless connections.
Many of you might think I'm joking, in a very lame manner. Unfortunately, I'm being totally serious.
And I really am kinda disappointed right now.
Just once I'd like someone to call me 'Sir' without adding 'You're making a scene.'
You don't have to dig your laptop out of your bag, open it up, and drain your battery to find out. Quite disappointing when the hotel advertises "free wireless access" and you can't figure out where the designated 3ft^3 that it works is.
.......since it's backordered, and won't help for christmas gifts.... and i'll forget this one exists in a few days anyway.
Before I get out my PowerBook, I whip out the Zaurus to see what WiFi networks are available, open, and operational.
The Zaurus can go all the way, and actually connect to the network and use a WWW browser to connect to sites. So, you can verify that everything is fully operational, available, and open.
If I just want to check something quick on a www site, I might not even need to get my laptop out. I certainly wouldn't want to be writing many emails from the tiny Zaurus keyboard. But, for some quick checks it's great.
Also -- A new version of OpenZaurus was recently released. It includes updated Opie apps, and improves on the WiFi capabilities of the old Sharp firmwares.
Is it better than a Pringles' can?
So, as opposed to asking somebody at the desk, I spend $50 and figure it our for myself? I guess some people have more free time than I do.
"I'd rather be a lightning rod than a seismometer." -Ken Kesey
How is connecting to an open wireless network illegal? Against various companies terms of service (which, technically, the AP owner would be breaking, not the AP user,) yes. But illegal?
Last I checked, there was no law stating that it was punishable by jail time or fine to use someone's open wireless internet connection.
Another non-functioning site was "uncertainty.microsoft.com."
The purpose of that site was not known.
This device is small and convenient. It works right away with little to no effort. With a laptop, you don't get the same convenience of whipping it out and putting it right back for a quick Wifi signal check. Also, not everyone carries there laptop everywhere they go. If you don't have a PDA with Wifi (and most people don't), then this device would be an affordable alternative.
Remember, in life you pay for 1. convenience 2. small size.
Bill Clinton: Pimp we can believe in. - The Shirt!!!
My home network (Apple Airport Extreme Base Station) is open on purpose. I want my guests to be able to use it. And if you need signal from my front lawn, you're welcome to that also.
Seems like a decent net-citizen thing to do.
So what am I missing? Why would I want to be secure? (Answer 1: my personal data goes over the network unencrypted. Ok, how do I solve that yet give the world open access to by Internet connection.)
What is the point of this device if you need some sort of computer to access the network anyway?
I use the IBM connections manager on my thinkpad to scan for networks. It then displays a list of all the networks it finds. Tells me SSID, Type (a/b/g) and WEB secured or not. I select one and hit connect.
Seems like this is a solution looking for a problem.
Apple free since 1990!
I subscribe to a delightful hotspot service that charges me US$10 for three months of unlimited high-speed access at about 100 hotspots all over town (I know this sounds like a commercial but I really love them - it's completely changed my life and I now spend 75% of my working time outdoors at sidewalk cafes and the like).
But there are a lot of factors to balance in order to get the perfect working spot. If it's outdoors, it's got to be in the shade (during daytime) or under shelter (if rain seems likely). They've got to serve something to eat that I'm in the mood for. They can't be so crowded that I will feel guilty about tying up a table for hours. And preferably, they have a power outlet I can use.
While I could wander around the neighborhood sizing restaurants up with my laptop open and bleeping, I think that would be a bit dorky even for me. With the little detector, people just think I'm glancing at my mobile phone.
At the moment I'm sitting at an all-night sidewalk Chinese joint near the Jalan Bulan Kiosk hotspot, where I pigged out for $0.75. No power outlet but the price is right (and the food wasn't bad at all). There's a perfect breeze, and good music in the background. All thanks to SmartID. Don't knock it!
"Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
when they integrate GPS into these things. Before then, all these wifi detectors are just toys and not serious tools.
My laptop takes over a minute to boot, and has maybe an hour's battery life, so I don't want to turn it on and off a lot as I scan for possible networks. I have a cheapo detector too, but I'd guess 75% of networks I scan are protected, so it doesn't help much. If your equipment works fine for you, in the situations where you want it, and you see no advantage, then certainly you shouldn't spend the $50. But for me, and some others, it's a useful device well worth the money.
What's the advantage over running a wireless detection app on my laptop or PDA? Why spend $50 on something when I already have a tool that works?
Well.. if you already have a wireless PDA that you carry around all the time, perhaps it wouldn't be too useful to you. But it is useful for people who are looking for a wireless signal for their laptop. Instead of lugging the laptop around open and powered up, they can walk (or drive) around with this little gadget and check for signals. Not only is it less cumbersome, it is also safer while driving, and probably even more important it doesn't use up the laptop battery before finding a connection.
Or, for something like looking for rogue access points or checking network signal strength, one might ask "why pay $250 for a wireless PDA or even more for a laptop when I can get a $50 tool to that works just fine?"
I got my WI-FI detector from www.tvbegone.com and it's never worked right
Usually, when I try to use it in a bar, there's some kind of electrical problem and all the TV's shutdown
I agree.
These things have been endlessly reviewed, but, no one ever tells me why I may want one. I got bored of this a week or so a go:
http://www.gonzo-wireless.co.uk/news/?postid=19
I'm personally can't wait to try this new unit. I made the mistake of buying from kensington and what a disappointment that was.
Why don't you just carry around a tiny access point instead of an access point finder? Duh! Problem solved!
At the moment I'm sitting at an all-night sidewalk Chinese joint near the Jalan Bulan Kiosk hotspot, where I pigged out for $0.75. No power outlet but the price is right (and the food wasn't bad at all). There's a perfect breeze, and good music in the background."
...
Where is the Jalan Bulan Kiosk? This sounds really nice
timothy
jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
Whaddaya mean "What's the point?"? It's a cool little gadget!
A REAL AMERICAN would buy the little keychain model in order to detect whether there were any signals and it was worth pulling out the Canary Wireless model, in order to determine whether the network was open, so that they could pull out their WLAN PDA to test connectivity and download speeds, to make sure it was worth getting out the laptop and get some REAL WORK done!
Why? What kind of a question is that to ask, at Christmas of all times!
Kuala Lumpur, just across the road from Low Yat Plaza (Malaysia's biggest computer mall, a mere shadow of Bangkok's Panthip Plaza but with better prices).
"Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
That sounds like an interesting place to see ... I wish I could find 75-cent Chinese buffet ;)
:)
How well can someone with English as primary language navigate?
timothy
jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
These hotspot detectors are pretty good sensors. But what's really missing is a "live map" of hotspots, correlated with geolocation. So, before I disconnect, I get the last live map, which can direct me to the closest place where I can next connect. Combined with a mobile phone, or other 3G device impractical for long sessions, but OK to find the real connection, such a live map is a real enabler. All these sensors should be collaborating to contribute their local pieces of the puzzle, as they traverse it. How is it that they're leaving out the network from these network detectors, when that would address the main problem they're designed to solve?
--
make install -not war
A big problem with the Zaurus, esp. with a wireless card attached, is that it's battery life is pretty short. My experience is that the battery similarly doesn't hold its charge for very long - you can't just carry this around for a while and then expect it to work - the device needs to be recharged on a regular basis. In fact, the wireless card simply won't work if the charge is too low even though other software will run. The Zaurus also doesn't fit in your pocket :-)