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Forums » 802.11i Security Upgrade » Security good
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Lumberjack
Premium
join:2003-01-18
Newport News, VA

Security good

This is good that the IEEE is working to get things accomplished at a good pace. But once its ratified I wonder how long it will take for the vendors to implement.
--
Dopeler effect: The tendency of stupid ideas to seem smarter when they come at you rapidly.
smp606

join:2002-01-16
PA

Re: Security good

Yes! hopefully vendors will implement this within a month or two...

BigARR
You Can Call Me Al
Premium
join:2004-01-16
MI, USA

said by Lumberjack See Profile:
This is good that the IEEE is working to get things accomplished at a good pace. But once its ratified I wonder how long it will take for the vendors to implement.

And...when they do will it require new hardware or just a firmware upgrade?

Karl Bode
News Guy
join:2000-03-02

Re: Security good

The majority of chips shipped by 2002 should have enough processing power to be able to handle it with just a firmware upgrade.
DSLrgm
Premium,MVM
join:2002-08-22
Oak Park, MI

I worked on the standard.

There are not a lot of differences between WPA and 802.11i.

Any hardware that works with WPA will work with 802.11i.

The spec has been stable for almost a year. Changes were cleaning up the text.

A lot of vendors should have code out quickly, as will MS (for XP and Win2000).
iffy

join:2004-02-07
Columbus, OH

Re: 802.11i times

WPA was never supported under W2K, without third party software. Hopefully this will change with 802.11i, but I wouldn't count on it.

wavguy2003
370's Forever
Premium
join:2004-03-18
Saint Charles, IL

Re: 802.11i times

Not completely true. Microsoft released WPA Pre-Shared key support for W2K last February.

Zomniak

join:2001-01-08
Frisco, TX
·Grande Communicati..

I've been using WPA-PSK with AES encryption for over a year with various hardware that all talk to each other:

Linksys WAP54G
Linksys WRT54G
Dell Truemobile 1450
D-Link A/B/G PCMCIA card
D-Link DWL-G120 (USB)
Linksys WPC54GS

Everything above uses broadcom chips except for the D-Links, which use Atheros and Prism chips.

So, what is going to be different if I upgrade to 802.11i drivers?
--
The visionary is always right.

Lumberjack
Premium
join:2003-01-18
Newport News, VA

Re: What will change?

Arg. Too bad Linksys/Broadcomm don't publish Linux drivers. Or at least the API specs.
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