Yes, most industry monthly print magazines have long lead times. When I worked for a small mailorder retailer that advertised in MacWorld and MacUser (US), we had to submit our ads 3 months in advance of the cover date. That is partly because publishers like to ship each month's issue almost a month ahead of time. This gives more shelf life to the magazine. Retailers generally put the magazines on the shelf the moment they come in, but don't remove old unsold issues until it's past their cover date. So you can expect to see both the December and January issues on newsstands now.
Multiple WEP keys not Wi-Fi compliant
on
WEP Keys in Mac OS X?
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· Score: 3, Informative
FYI, the Wi-Fi certification testing only tests one key at a time, in slot 1 (that's slot 0, if you count like a good C programmer). There are many things that the 802.11 specs allow, that are nevertheless outside of what Wi-Fi certifies. This is one of them.
Let your sysadmin know that s/he's configured the network in a non-Wi-Fi-compliant manner, and maybe s/he'll see the light.
Yes, most industry monthly print magazines have long lead times. When I worked for a small mailorder retailer that advertised in MacWorld and MacUser (US), we had to submit our ads 3 months in advance of the cover date. That is partly because publishers like to ship each month's issue almost a month ahead of time. This gives more shelf life to the magazine. Retailers generally put the magazines on the shelf the moment they come in, but don't remove old unsold issues until it's past their cover date. So you can expect to see both the December and January issues on newsstands now.
FYI, the Wi-Fi certification testing only tests one key at a time, in slot 1 (that's slot 0, if you count like a good C programmer). There are many things that the 802.11 specs allow, that are nevertheless outside of what Wi-Fi certifies. This is one of them.
Let your sysadmin know that s/he's configured the network in a non-Wi-Fi-compliant manner, and maybe s/he'll see the light.