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65 of 68 found the following review helpful:
Good book of wireless tipsMay 19, 2004
I'll have to disagree a bit with reviewer Pablo D. The book is broad and shallow, but I think it appeals to more than just the raw beginner. I found a number of tricks (hard to call them "hacks") in the book that have been useful. While many of the topics covered are simply product reviews, that information is helpful to wireless users, too.Here's the table of contents of the book, which spells out all 100 "hacks": Chapter 1. The Standards 1. 802.11: The Mother of All IEEE Wireless Ethernet 2. 802.11a: The Betamax of the 802.11 Family 3. 802.11b: The De Facto Standard 4. 802.11g: Like 802.11b, only Faster 5. 802.16: Long Distance Wireless Infrastructure 6. Bluetooth: Cable Replacement for Devices 7. 900 MHz: Low Speed, Better Coverage 8. CDPD, 1xRTT, and GPRS: Cellular Data Networks 9. FRS and GMRS: Super Walkie-Talkies 10. 802.1x: Port Security for Network Communications 11. HPNA and Powerline Ethernet 12. BSS Versus IBSS Chapter 2. Bluetooth and Mobile Data 13. Remote Control OS X with a Sony Ericsson Phone 14. SMS with a Real Keyboard 15. Photo Blog Automatically with the Nokia 3650 16. Using Bluetooth with Linux 17. Bluetooth to GPRS in Linux 18. Bluetooth File Transfers in Linux 19. Controlling XMMS with Bluetooth Chapter 3. Network Monitoring 20. Find All Available Wireless Networks 21. Network Discovery Using NetStumbler 22. Network Detection on Mac OS X 23. Detecting Networks Using Handheld PCs 24. Passive Scanning with KisMAC 25. Establishing Connectivity 26. Quickly Poll Wireless Clients with ping 27. Finding Radio Manufacturers by MAC Address 28. Rendezvous Service Advertisements in Linux 29. Advertising Arbitrary Rendezvous Services in OS X 30. "Brought to you by" Rendezvous Ad Redirector 31. Detecting Networks with Kismet 32. Running Kismet on Mac OS X 33. Link Monitoring in Linux with Wavemon 34. Historical Link State Monitoring 35. EtherPEG and DriftNet 36. Estimating Network Performance 37. Watching Traffic with tcpdump 38. Visual Traffic Analysis with Ethereal 39. Tracking 802.11 Frames in Ethereal 40. Interrogating the Network with nmap 41. Network Monitoring with ngrep 42. Running ntop for Real-Time Network Stats Chapter 4. Hardware Hacks 43. Add-on Laptop Antennas 44. Increasing the Range of a Titanium PowerBook 45. WET11 Upgrades 46. AirPort Linux 47. Java Configurator for AirPort APs 48. Apple Software Base Station 49. Adding an Antenna to the AirPort 50. The NoCat Night Light 51. Do-It-Yourself Access Point Hardware 52. Compact Flash Hard Drive 53. Pebble 54. Tunneling: IPIP Encapsulation 55. Tunneling: GRE Encapsulation 56. Running Your Own Top-Level Domain 57. Getting Started with Host AP 58. Make Host AP a Layer 2 Bridge 59. Bridging with a Firewall 60. MAC Filtering with Host AP 61. Hermes AP 62. Microwave Cabling Guide 63. Microwave Connector Reference 64. Antenna Guide 65. Client Capability Reference Chart 66. Pigtails 67. 802.11 Hardware Suppliers 68. Home-Brew Power over Ethernet 69. Cheap but Effective Roof Mounts Chapter 5. Do-It-Yourself Antennas 70. Deep Dish Cylindrical Parabolic Reflector 71. "Spider" Omni 72. Pringles Can Waveguide 73. Pirouette Can Waveguide 74. Primestar Dish with Waveguide Feed 75. BiQuad Feed for Primestar Dish 76. Cut Cable Omni Antenna 77. Slotted Waveguides 78. The Passive Repeater 79. Determining Antenna Gain Chapter 6. Long Distance Links 80. Establishing Line of Sight 81. Calculating the Link Budget 82. Aligning Antennas at Long Distances 83. Slow Down to Speed Up 84. Taking Advantage of Antenna Polarization 85. Map the Wireless Landscape with NoCat Maps Chapter 7. Wireless Security 86. Making the Best of WEP 87. Dispel the Myth of Wireless Security 88. Cracking WEP with AirSnort: The Easy Way 89. NoCatAuth Captive Portal 90. NoCatSplash and Cheshire 91. Squid Proxy over SSH 92. SSH SOCKS 4 Proxy 93. Forwarding Ports over SSH 94. Quick Logins with SSH Client Keys 95. "Turbo-Mode" SSH Logins 96. OpenSSH on Windows Using Cygwin 97. Location Support for Tunnels in OS X 98. Using vtun over SSH 99. Automatic vtund.conf Generator 100. Tracking Wireless Users with arpwatch Appendix: Deep Dish Parabolic Reflector Template
12 of 12 found the following review helpful:
For the serious wireless freakMar 07, 2004
By Jack D. Herrington
"engineer and author"
This is an amazing book about wireless. It's coverage of everything from the operating system level stuff, to drivers, to cards, to hacking cards, to building your own antenna, to doing shotgun wireless is just incredible. If you are a serious wireless junkie you will love this book. For the casual coffee shop surfer, this is probably not the right book, but you probably don't have any issues with wireless anyway.
16 of 18 found the following review helpful:
For the tinkerer in youNov 14, 2003
By W Boudville An interesting amalgam of software and hardware tips. The author clearly loves to tinker, as seen by his description of how he and friends put together a waveguide antenna built around a Pringles can. Perusing the book seems to give some of the flavour of the Homebrew Computer Club in San Francisco during the 1970s, when the PC revolution was gestating. To some (many?) of you, the do-it-yourself ethos of this book may be its greatest allure. Flickenger reinforces this with many examples of analysis programs contributed by enthusiasts, often with source code available for your modification. If indeed you seem attracted, do not tarry. Flickenger may not explicitly state this anywhere in the book, but it really describes a field and hobby that will rapidly make much of the book obsolete. Chances are, in a few years hardware will be standardised by a few major manufacturers, and most operating systems will have all the necessary wireless software. So if you want some fun, perhaps now is the time.
8 of 9 found the following review helpful:
A Fascinating Read for Wireless EnthusiastsMar 02, 2005
By Alysha E. Alcantara
"jabberwocky"
Despite the dubiously provocative title, this book in essence, is a practical guide to the wireless frontier of telecommunications. The term `hacking' is often perceived as a negative act, while the term `hacker' in the computer tech realm is heeded as a compliment--tinctured with hues of creativity and technical prowess (to infiltrate network systems). The term `hack' in this book, refers to something entirely different. It's defined as a "quick-n-dirty" means of getting to the core of a technological problem; or a resourceful and unconventional way of accomplishing a task.
This book offers a panoramic view of the wireless landscape in practical and easily digestible terms. The background and evolution of wireless technology is brought into focus, with wide-lens coverage on existing wireless standards that define the Wi-Fi revolution today--the 802.11b and 802.11g protocols, their antecedents, as well as latter counterparts that have yet to pervade the mainstream. The characteristics of each protocol (frequency bands on which it operates, data speed capacity, etc.) along with their real-world applications, virtues and limitations, provide the reader greater understanding. These inherent strengths and weaknesses, when framed into context, empowers the consumer to make an informed decision on a wireless format best suited to his needs. A panoply of wireless devices and concepts (e.g. Bluetooth technology, mobile phone carrier networks, etc.) are also highlighted. And wireless-oriented acronyms (e.g. TDMA, CDMA, GSM, etc.) that obscure the telecommunications domain are effectively elucidated.
Each chapter stands on its own--laid out with a specific subject matter--so that page-by-page reading is not necessary for comprehension. Chapter 5 ("Do-It-Yourself Antennas") presents tried-and-true, home-spun devices for extending wireless network range, while Chapter 7 deals with wireless security--offering tips for recognizing network holes and providing suggestions on securing a network.
While valuable troubleshooting tips are plentiful, much of this book is dedicated to specific wireless schemes (or "hacks") for achieving optimal wireless network efficiency. Leaving no computer user behind, each "hack" is delineated in various Windows, Mac and Linux platforms. And each hack is rated in terms of difficulty: beginner, moderate and expert. An expert-level hack might be entitled, "Photo Blog Automatically with the Nokia 3650", which instructs users on photo publishing from the road, without having to log on to a computer.
Practical and sometimes unconventional tools are provided for implementing and enabling wireless technology in a home environment and elsewhere. One segment provides beginner-level, step-by-step instructions on how to turn your laptop into a spectrum analyzer (without installing any additional software) for the purpose of locating all wireless networks within range.
In its entirety, this book is concisely laid out for ease of comprehension. The technologies that have come to define the wireless revolution are illuminated and relative strengths and weaknesses of various network standards are highlighted. Resources for optimizing networking hardware are provided--from extending range and intensifying data throughput, to managing and exploiting valuable wireless resources--in creative and non-traditional ways. Riveting in content, it brings into focus the intensely dynamic pace of wireless evolution, while effectively familiarizing the reader with the infinite bounties of telecomm's wireless dimension.
4 of 4 found the following review helpful:
VERY VERY HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!!Jul 19, 2006
By John R. Vacca
"Tech Write Independent Reviewer"
Are you one of the millions of users who suddenly need nothing more than a laptop and wireless card to get online? If you are, then this book is for you! Authors Rob Flickenger and Roger Weeks, have done an outstanding job of writing the 2nd edition of a practical book that gives you the reader, the most out of your wireless networking hardware and software.
Flickenger and Weeks, begin by demonstrating some of the uses for Bluetooth, Mobile Phones and GPS, which will keep your devices connected, without wires. Then, the authors show you the tools you need to detect the presence of wireless networks, coordinate spectrum usage to avoid interference, and visualize network performance. Next, they explore the current standards for securing wireless networks and suggest several strong methods for protecting yourself and your wireless users from abuse.
The authors then show you how to push wireless hardware to the limits, extending range and increasing performance and efficiency. They continue by covering software hacks in detail. Then, the authors present several homebrew designs for wireless networking made by contributors from all over the world. Finally, they present a collection of techniques to help simplify the job of building wireless networks that cover the area you require.
In this most excellent book, you will find practical techniques for extending range , increasing throughput, managing wireless resources, and generally making your wireless networking vision a reality. More importantly, this book brings you the knowledge of experts who apply what they know in the real world every day.
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