Andrew Daviel wrote:
(resending this from my subscribed address... duh..)
On Thu, 10 Nov 2005, Bill Fenner wrote:
If people don't know how to turn off ad-hoc mode, will they know how
to check their MAC address against the list?
Maybe... I know very well how to check my MAC in my primary OS (Linux)
and (I think) in my secondary OS (Win2k). But setting the ad-hoc mode is
buried in a config file in linux, and I still don't know how to check in
Win2k (no, I haven't been running Win2k, and I can see it says "managed"
in Linux iwconfig so that's OK...)
Might it be possible to run a local webserver that can check its ARP
table against the list - it could even offer customized hints how to fix
the problem. Assuming all the APs are on the same network and there's no
routing at that level. (Of course if you can't get on you won't see the
list, but if it was also a useful place to find updated agendas, wireless
performance stats etc. so that people would go there, in addition to
running the "display in the foyer", they might see that they had been a
problem earlier).
IIRC, MS didn't disable the Messenger service by default until Windows
XP. So if the majority of the problem systems are running 2k, you could
have an automated box that looked for ad-hoc networks and did a "net
send" to the perpetrator explaining the problem.
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