Tag Archives: Wireless Networking

SF WiFi now an Aruba Networks Reseller

SFWiFi is excited to announce we now provide Aruba Networks Wireless LAN Solutions for secure, reliable, manageable & scalable wireless enterprise infrastructure

Aruba Networks is a leading provider of next-generation network access solutions for the mobile enterprise. The company’s Mobile Virtual Enterprise (MOVE) architecture unifies wired and wireless network infrastructures into one seamless access solution for corporate headquarters, mobile business professionals, remote workers and guests. This unified approach to access networks dramatically improves productivity and lowers capital and operational costs.

SF WiFi Aruba Networks Reseller

Contact SF WiFi for more information

Wireless Surveillance Turnkey Solution

Wireless Security Cameras / Wireless Surveillance:

Business:

Network cameras allow you to keep an eye on the business and manage your resources even when you can’t be there. Captured video can be stored to a hard drive and viewed remotely from virtually anywhere you can access the Internet or even your phone.

Home:

Security Solutions are the perfect answer for family. Protect your assets against theft. Capture footage in state of the art digital video quality to see what you’ve been missing. Monitor your home or remote location from any Internet connection.

Features:
Indoor and outdoor solutions
View, record and manage advanced features from any Internet connection
Motion detection recording
Email alerts
Transmit high quality video over a secure encrypted wireless signal
View video, hear sounds and record from any Internet connection
Manage cameras
Manage playback
Secure a greater area with pan and tilt controls side-to-side up-and-down
Contact SF WiFi

WPA Cracked

Japanese researchers say they can crack WPA (Wi-Fi Protected Access), the
successor to the old-school WEP. The previous method of attacking WPA devices took up to 15 minutes to be successful, and didn’t always work. The new method is said to work on far more devices but just like the old attack, this new one only works on WPA devices that use the TKIP (Temporal Key Integrity Protocol) algorithm, which is a setting in the router, access point or wireless controller.

Bottom Line: The AES encrypted algorithm is much stronger. When using WPA use the AES algorithm in place of TKIP.  Or use WPA2 with AES.