Wireless routers have two sets of passwords: one that allows users to join it when it is using a wireless encryption method such as WPA-PSK, and another for accessing its administrative control panel.
I've got a netgear WGR624 with the latest firmware and I have WPA-PSK enabled and no timeout for the key.<BR><BR>A friend of mine just bought a WGR614 and he's enabled WPA-PSK, though the router's ...
i just replaced my old 'b' router with a netgear 54g router. I set all up in windows first and configured WPA security, and changed the name, (from NETGEAR default to a made up one) and I was online ...
It’s not a secret that the WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) encryption method for wireless networks can be easily cracked. Using WEP actually invites Wi-Fi ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results