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:::::::::::: vowe.net by The reason why Germans mix up V and W is that the sound in English that is pronounced as W does not exist as a systemically defined entity in German (systemativcally defined entity = what we call a phoneme). The area of pronunciation where you find W is not used for making sense in German, but may occur as a possible pronunciation of the sound V (written W) in German, so Germans struggling with making a difference between spoken V and W tend to mix them up.
On the other hand this explains why very few English speaking people who know me will pronounce my name correctly. Bob, Ed, John and Vesey, I am not talking about you.:-) The German language has the letters V and W. They are pronounced like English F and V respectively.
Here is a hint: Say 'Folker Vayber' and you got it right. :::::::::::: vowe.net by Of course this entry is poor nonsense. However, I find it interesting where this post originated from: OrgName: The Defense Information Systems Agency OrgID: DISA Address: DISA/DSSO/JCLCC Address: Room BF655A, The Pentagon City: Washington StateProv: DC PostalCode: 20301 Country: US NetRange: 198.25.0.0 - 198.26.255.255 CIDR: 198.25.0.0/16, 198.26.0.0/16 NetName: NETBLK-DISA-C NetHandle: NET-198-25-0-0-1 Parent: NET-198-0-0-0-0 NetType: Direct Allocation NameServer: AAA-KELLY.NIPR.MIL NameServer: AAA-VAIHINGEN.NIPR.MIL NameServer: AAA-WHEELER.NIPR.MIL NameServer: AAA-VIENNA.NIPR.MIL Comment: RegDate: 1992-12-05 Updated: 2004-01-13. :::::::::::: vowe.net by I wasted a good two hours this week getting an Airport Extreme (AE) to work. The owner has a WLAN in place that I secured a few month ago with WEP. The new AE was to either hook up the network to the stereo, or the printer to the network. The basic task seemed so simple.
You hook up the AE to a power outlet, then join its WLAN, fire up the AirPort Express Assistant (AEA) on the Mac/PC and configure it to join the existing network. However, there was no existing network. The network was not in the same configuration that I left it a few months ago. Someone had decided it would be much safer to hide the SSID, in a neighborhood that has lots of other WLANs, some of them without encryption at all.
As if anybody would bother to crack your network, when there is a free one 5 channels away. Talking about channels, the WLAN was on channel 8 and the neighbor with on channel 6. That is a 2-channel separation which is not too smart. Alas, with the hidden SSID, how could the neighbor make a better choice? Time for a rant: Hiding the SSID in a WLAN is about as useful as driving at night with your lights off.
It works very well for the military, but everybody else puts themselves into more danger than it's worth. So once that was cleared up, the AEA was able to see the existing WLAN and asked for the password.
Entered that, the AE rebooted. And did not show up on the network. First thing you try is, you switch off security on the existing network, go back to square one, and repeat the procedure. So it was something with this 'password'.
To cut a long story short: - never use WEP 'passwords' - use HEX keys instead - if you enter the HEX key into a password field, then put a $ in front of the key Nobody tells you that. At least not in the documentation.
Probably because Apple assumes that you have an all-Apple setup, where all the devices share the same idea of what a password is. So, today we have an AE update to 4.01. See what they worked on? Third party access points WEP keys. Download descarca vrajitorul din oz pdf. :::::::::::: vowe.net by Have a laptop? Travel with it? Ever wish you could quickly and easily find a wireless hot spot?
If the answer is 'Yes', then whether you're in an airport, another office or even at home, the QuickLink Mobile Wi-Fi Seeker will help you zero-in on the best access point. Sounds like a neat device to me. $30 sounds like a reasonable price as well. If only the shipping to Switzerland wouldn't be $120. Note to self: Put this on the shopping list for the next trip to the US.
:::::::::::: vowe.net by is an interesting article, bringing up the idea that Google might start an IM service based on the open Jabber protocol. I am a happy Trillian Pro user, which allows me to be online in MSN, AIM, ICQ, YahooIM!, Jabber and Sametime (oops, IBM Lotus Instant Messaging) from one single (and IMHO neat) user interface.