I'm using alleged 128-bit WEP encryption. Are y'all saying it's useless?
A line I've heard repeated a few times recently is that turning WEP on is basically enough to indicate to people that your network is private. Honest, courteous, people will understand that and keep out. Anyone who's determined to break in, though, will have a fairly easy time of it.
What I'm curious about is whether or not anyone has come up with a wireless access point that integrates something more robust on top of WEP, in a consumer-friendly, easy-to-use way.
I'd really like to see a browser comparison that emphasizes reliability. Nothing on my new iBook ever crashes, except Mozilla and IE. They don't crash all *that* frequently, but it's way more often than on my PC, strangely enough. At some point, I'm going to play around with OmniWeb, and see how that is.
I've been using emusic for about a year now. It's great. I download most of my music from there now -- about 5 or 6 CD's per month. (I'll buy maybe one actual retail-price CD per month now.) It's great for weirdos like me who live off of stuff from Matador Records, Victory Records, and other oddball labels. I'm interested in very little major-label stuff now.
I'm using alleged 128-bit WEP encryption. Are y'all saying it's useless?
A line I've heard repeated a few times recently is that turning WEP on is basically enough to indicate to people that your network is private. Honest, courteous, people will understand that and keep out. Anyone who's determined to break in, though, will have a fairly easy time of it.
What I'm curious about is whether or not anyone has come up with a wireless access point that integrates something more robust on top of WEP, in a consumer-friendly, easy-to-use way.
I'd really like to see a browser comparison that emphasizes reliability. Nothing on my new iBook ever crashes, except Mozilla and IE. They don't crash all *that* frequently, but it's way more often than on my PC, strangely enough. At some point, I'm going to play around with OmniWeb, and see how that is.
I've been using emusic for about a year now. It's great. I download most of my music from there now -- about 5 or 6 CD's per month. (I'll buy maybe one actual retail-price CD per month now.) It's great for weirdos like me who live off of stuff from Matador Records, Victory Records, and other oddball labels. I'm interested in very little major-label stuff now.