Saturday, February 14, 2004

Getting a PC 802.11b to talk WEP to an Airport Extreme Base Station (AEBS)

Google Groups: View Thread "Has ANYONE gotten ANY XP/PC PCMCIA 802.11b card to c..."I've been unable to get a PC Client to connect with WEP enable to my Apple Airport Extreme Base Station (AEBS). Apple has been of no help.

Alice Faber answered this one for me in a usenet posting:
If you're connecting through the Windows XP interface, click on the
Advanced tab. In some XP installations, there's a default setting that
will guarantee that you won't connect, hidden on the Advanced tab. I
forget the exact wording of it (I don't have access to an XP box to
check), but it will say something about smart card authentication.

On the main tab, you may have to search out a pulldown menu that will
allow you to selecte Shared authentication also.

The key phrase is "shared authentication". A google search on this phrase and "airport" brought a lot of hits:

A few key notes:

A. http://www.opentechsupport.net/forums/archive/topic/18986-1.html
Be sure the right XP services are running

1.) Go to Start -> Control Panel -> Performance and Maintenance -> Administrative Tools -> Services.
2.) Scroll down to Wireless Zero Configuration, and double-click Wireless Zero Configuration.
3.) On the General tab, after Startup type, change the startup type to Automatic.
4.) Start the service by clicking Start.

B. http://stevenf.com/mt/archives/000471.php
A few discussions, and an aside that Apple's advanced tech support was clueless.
This is where they point out the need to enable "shared authentication". There's a hint that older 802.11b implementations don't support it.

C. http://wireless-starter-kit.com/airportblog/
Lots of discussions on Airport wireless.

D. http://www.macwireless.com/index.html
Serious Mac wireless vendor.

E. http://discussions.info.apple.com/WebX?13@83.CGwtaOvycER.930@.688ec533/0

Accessing a Airport Network with a Windows XP PC or laptop (WEP enabled)
http://www.ifelix.co.uk/tech/1000.html

Patch required if running Windows XP and WPA on an AEBS
http://www.ifelix.co.uk/tech/2003.html

The three main reasons people have problems are

1. WEP Key in plain text and not HEX

If you enable WEP on the AEBS, you need to note down the Hex Airport Network Password, if you are using 128bit encryption this will be a 26 digit number.

If you open the Airport Admin Utility you should see something like this

http://www.ifelix.co.uk/tech/images004/ae005.gif

You may need to click a button called Password

Note that I have blanked out my passwords

The Wireless ASCII Equivalent Password is the plain text network password you use to access your Airport network with a Mac.

The Wireless Hex Equivalent Password is the hex version of the plain text, and this is what you would use with your PC.

2.IEEE 802.1x authentication is on
Ensure that the Enable IEEE 802.1x authentication for this network check box is not checked.

3. Authentication Mode is not set to Shared
Ensure Network Authentication (Shared Mode) box is ticked


On a separate topic, a wireless bridge for 802.11g AEBS networks, I found:

http://www.macwireless.com/html/products/11g/11gEthAdapter.html

and an other great usenet posting sent me to:

http://www.buffalotech.com/wireless/products/airstation/WLAG54C.html

Bottom line: usenet lives.

Buffalo Technology (USA) - 802.11g wirless bridge

Buffalo Technology (USA)
A usenet poster says this is compatible with an airport extreme base station. They have a similar device with a single ethernet port that looks quite compact:

http://www.buffalotech.com/wireless/products/airstation/WLITX1G54.html

Wednesday, February 11, 2004

The megapixel myth, a pixel too far?

The megapixel myth, a pixel too far?
Great blog with links to some excellent reviews. This is why my 4 Mpixel G2 takes such lovely pictures, even compared to an "8 Mpixel" camera. Also why the 6 megapixel Canon CMOS sensor is such a sweet device -- and much superior to the recent flock of 8 megapixel monstrosities.

Tuesday, February 10, 2004

RFC 2557 (rfc2557) - MIME Encapsulation of Aggregate Documents, such as HT

RFC 2557 (rfc2557) - MIME Encapsulation of Aggregate Documents, such as HT
IE has long supported this, but it's also an RFC standard! Wish other browser (Firefox?) would do this.

iPhoto 4 fix for corrupted image database

iPhoto 4
First, some of my photos, the ones taken by my alternate camera as it happens, just don’t appear. They appear as empty white boxes and are nameless. Occasionally when scrolling they flash on for a split second – so I know they’re not totally gone. Why won’t iPhoto 4 display them?

[Try removing the thumbnail files: thumb32.data, thumb64.data, thumbJPG.data -MacInTouch]

Fixing an OS X software update problem:

Safari 1.2

Tasos Ioannidis
I had the same problem that another reader mentioned where Java 1.4.2 would not show on the software update, or would not install asking for the 1.4.1 update, etc. In my case, doing a finder search for all files containing the term softwareupdate (which included preference files, etc.) and deleting them, resolved the problem. Apparently resetting software update files was necessary. After that Java 1.4.2 installed fine.

A common OS X theme unfortunately -- when problems occur search on words and delete pref files. Another pref problem test is switching users. The good news is the UNIX naming conventions and OS X file organization helps with finding things. Also, OS X find is super fast. Bad news is the recurrent issue with bad prefs.