5.foreigngirl said:I'll go search for yours "computer peeps" threads. How many will they show up as started by Hotzie? Hmmm.....
ooops, that was mehotzie said:my wifi detector says it detected a comp on my network and it gives the ip and the mac addy , but i dont know what mine is and i dont want to lock my self out
lol i was spelling it wrong i feel like a totall fuckin idiotvansmack2000 said:hmm yeah run->cmd->ipcconfig
should work
lolhotzie said:lol i was spelling it wrong i feel like a totall fuckin idiot
lol i didnt even notice that u did until this post lolvansmack2000 said:lol
actually i spelled it wrong. im the jacktard
hotzie said:awesome , pintocas post on another thread helped me , this thread is now locked
hotzie said:lol i was spelling it wrong i feel like a totall fuckin idiot
blut wump said:Agreed, restricting by MAC address is the only way to wi-fly. It's not really necessary on the wired portion of your home network for obvious reasons.
How long will it be before someone can use electrical induction to get packets into your wired network without making a phyisical connection? Maybe I should go patent the idea.
UA_Iron said:How do you set up such restrictions?
jnuts said:Most routers have a built-in website to configure. Just look for MAC address filtering.
If you know the IP address on your local network of the router then just open your browser with that address.UA_Iron said:How do you set up such restrictions?
If you're on a mac/apple or running Linux then the equivalent would be ifconfig in a command box or terminal window. Look for a six-entry, colon-seperated string of numbers under 'en0:' or, maybe, 'eth0'.drrman said:to find your mac address, go to start, then click on run, type in CMD
then at the command prompt type this
ipconfig /all
it will be the "physical address"
simply typing IPCONFIG will NOT give you the MAC address of the LAN card, only the IP, subnet, and default gateway
blut wump said:If you're on a mac/apple or running Linux then the equivalent would be ifconfig in a command box or terminal window. Look for a six-entry, colon-seperated string of numbers under 'en0:' or, maybe, 'eth0'.
blut wump said:If you know the IP address on your local network of the router then just open your browser with that address.
For example, I might have my router on 10.4.3.2. I'd just type
http://10.4.3.2 into my browser. A common default would be 192.168.0.1
That should ask for a username and password. Typical defaults are 'admin' and 'password', which you should change forthwith. That should give you access to the built-in html interface to setup the router. If you have a manual then the rest should be plain-sailing.
UA_Iron said:yeah thats how I secured my wireless, I thought maybe a mac-address security based wireless would require something different.
who the fuck is she?????????drrman said:good clarification, probably wrong of me to assume she was on a windows PC
hotzie said:who the fuck is she?????????
UA_Iron said:I use WPA encryption.
think MAC filtering is necessary?
hotzie said:who the fuck is she?????????
drrman said:no, its not necessary and not something i would really worry about bro, but it is another step in security. for everyone i ever help set up a wireless network(friends/family) i just use WPA.......mac filtering can be a bit of a headache helping people add new machines etc when im helping/supporting them on the phone.
WPA is PLENTY strong my friend
hotzie said:who the fuck is she?????????
hotzie said:how can i find out my mac address .
hotzie's pw = underagep00nhotzie said:i figured it out last nite peeps , i was just spelling the shit wrong lol
im running WPA also , but i wanted to be positive someone didnt crack my pword or something.
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