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User: djihz

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  1. Avoid consumer-grade gear. on Ask Slashdot: Overcoming Convention Hall Wi-Fi Interference? · · Score: 2

    I have been setting up wired and wifi networks in trade shows for 10+ years now.
    Welcome to wifi Hell :)

    I do not think achieving 100% reliability is a sane goal in that context, but I found that there are simple ways to greatly improve the odds.

    > Consumer-grade routers / AP are no good. They often do a fine job, and they always give up quickly.
    In my view, using small-business equipment is a better way to go : still affordable, and a lot more resilient.
    For about 400 $ you should be able to find a basic gateway and access point (new - I'm thinking sonicwall / netgear prosafe / hp pro curve...)
    And if it matters, you still have web-based interfaces available to configure them.

    > Use fixed ip when possible. Avoid encryption if you can, avoid wep if you can't.

    > Reserve the network for your demo gear. If you also have to provide internet access to people working on the booth, use a separate network/gateway (your current linksys/d-link/... router might do the trick if less critical).

    > Also : wired.
    Not an option for your whole setup as I understand, but maybe part of it.

    I am no sysadmin/network admin/whatever so this is basic stuff, but works for me on a regular basis in your exact predicament.
    Hope this helps, and good luck to you.

  2. from forums.dropbox.com : on Dropbox Can't See Your Dat– Er, Never Mind · · Score: 1

    In our help article we state that Dropbox employees aren't able to access user files. This is not an intentionally misleading statement -- it is enforced by technical access controls on our backend storage infrastructure as well as strict policy prohibitions. The contents of a file will never be accessed by a Dropbox employee without the user's permission. We can see, however, why people may have misinterpreted "Dropbox employees aren't able to access user files" as a statement about how Dropbox uses encryption, so we will change this article to use the clearer "Dropbox employees are prohibited from accessing user files".

    Thread here : http://forums.dropbox.com/topic.php?id=36835

    Poor choice of words indeed.