Great Product: Too Bad The Architecture Doesn’t Fit
TechnologyEvaluation.COM:
Great Product: Too Bad The Architecture Doesn’t Fit
software development, security, opinion
TechnologyEvaluation.COM:
Great Product: Too Bad The Architecture Doesn’t Fit
IBM DeveloperWorks:
CVS for the developer or amateur
: tutorial, can be read online (web) or offline (PDF).
About two hours in length.
TechRepublic:
Take steps to secure vulnerable WLANs,
Oct 23, 2001,
Brian Hook
Brad Templeton:
Sample of Larry Ellison’s new National ID Card
“If you’re innocent, you have nothing to hide.”
US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases:
links to Web Sites for Biological, Chemical and Radiological Information, and
instructions for ordering their Medical Management of Biological Casualties Handbook.
WLAN VPN Support for Handhelds Ships. allNetDevices Oct 17 2001 3:58AM ET [Computer security news]
Major vendors tighten WLAN security
Oct 17, 2001 CNET
As part of the 802.1x standard, which has been approved but not implemented within 802.11b, the Windows XP client natively supports Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP), which provides dynamic, session-specific wireless encryption keys, central user administration via specialized third-party Remote Authentication Dial-In User Service (RADIUS) servers, and mutual authentication between client and Access Point (AP) and AP to RADIUS server.
Windows XP is also compatible with EAP-Transport Level Security (EAP-TLS), which uses digital certificates for authentication. Windows XP’s integration of these features will significantly ease deployment of EAP solutions because separate client utilities will no longer be necessary. These capabilities will reduce the risk involved in using 802.11b within a corporate network.