WEP is as good as open. You should have WPA minimum James Finstrom Rhino Equipment http://rhinoequipment.com Twitter: http://twitter.com/rhinoequipment Facebook: http://facebook.com/RhinoEquipment ಠ_ಠ ** On Thu, May 9, 2013 at 8:17 PM, keith smith wrote: > > Hi, > > I just got off the phone with Dell. I bought a new Dell and it would not > connect to my WIFI. > > I have another computer that is in another room that has worked on this > network for 3+ years w/o an issue. > > The first guy told me to never password protect my router, and never > configure an access list. He said by using a WEP key my router is secure. > I disagree. I'm thinking the more layers of security the better. > > So the second guy says the problem was I needed to disable the router's > PIN, which he did and then he changed the wireless channel to 6 (was auto) > and the new Dell was able to access the Internet. > > However then the computer in the other room could not access the > Internet. Ok, after a reboot it now connects via WIFI. > > I was able to re-activate my access list. I had a WEP key in place the > whole time. > > I did a little reading on the PIN and it appears it is not all that > important and is a consumer grade protection in case no other security is > used. > > Is the PIN just a low grade security level that is not all that > effective? Also do you agree with the first guy that said the only change > should be to add a WEP key? > > Thanks!! > > > > > ------------------------ > Keith Smith > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: > http://lists.phxlinux.org/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss >