I have the VP930B AND I have the X defects which is called a Mura defect type 3. Supposedly this defect comes from an unenven pressure on the display...if the pressure is too much, the crystals will create that "backlight" effect.
I contacted Viewsonic and go it replaced (took the Express...
You approximately need 2500-4000 weak packets (some hardware are weakers than others) to be able to crack the wep key which translates to roughly 1.3 millions packets. With TKIP you can set it to a per session or per packet key change, the trade off of course is a huge hit performance wise...
The simulation configuration was a biacth on my Cisco Safe exam (CCSP). I accidently forgot to save the configurations before pressing the "next" button. Result = failed :( Took it the following day with VUE and passed it with flying colors. Still, the hands on questions are pretty detailed...
Just to add to what Jack said. You can find rating in mW (1/1000 W). dBm are 10Log(X) where x is in mW for example 1000 mW = 1W = 10log(1000) = 10*3= 30dBm. Usually in you will find your card power rated in mW (example Cisco ACU) This is because your card without the antenna is considered an...
You will need two directional antennas...two yagis would work juste fine and two wireless bridges (or one workgroup bridge and one access point if you are on a tight budget...all your wired equipement switch whatever would connect to the bridges (keep in mind that bridges are more expensive than...
The D-link 624 have some problems. You have to make sure it's a C2 revision (written on the box under the UPC code) otherwise it will give you headaches. Check this review
I wasn't trying to set it on the DMZ. Allowing stmp through the pix without the fixup would not allow the exchange client to use their features (checking the addresses against the exchange server and other goodies). The exchange client would not be able to log to check their email also...
Another thing you could do (I did not have time) is to have a drop with log at the end of your access-list and check what you client are trying to do to your Exchange...then u can open those specifics ports to your mail server
Forget it dude...I tried to set up that for a company last year and unless something changed it's not possible :)
I worked it out with the Cisco TAC. We ended up opening all UDP and TCP to the Exchange server which is not something I am confortable with (almost as if it's sitting directly on...
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