Posts Tagged ‘ips’

December 18 2009

How to Set Up and Install Your Own Home Network

Setting up a home network doesn’t have to be difficult. It also depends on what time of home network you want to install. Maybe you want to install a wired network or maybe you want to install a wireless network. It depends on the capabilities of the computers within your home as to what route you’re going to take. The wireless network The wireless network is probably your easiest network to install. That’s because you don’t have to hide a cord all the way around your home. As a matter of fact, you just need to have a computer that is wireless capable and a router. Seems easy enough, right? Well, it can still be a bit tricky because you have to program that router so that all of your computers can talk to it. So let’s say that your computer is not wireless capable. What do you do now? Well, you need to get a wireless adapter to plug into the computer or you need to plug it directly into the router with an Ethernet cable. In homes with multiple computers, there is sometimes that one computer that is not wireless capable. If the others are, they can simply talk to the router from wherever they are. If they are not wireless, then Ethernet cables need to be run from those computers to the router. The router is the hub for your network. Furthermore, you have to set up your Domain Name System so that the router knows what’s going on. You also have to set IPs and your Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. If you don’t do these things, then your computers are not going to be talking to each other the way you want them to. They have to know who and what they are talking to in order to ensure that permission is granted. You don’t want someone to sit outside of your home on a laptop and pull off of your network. They could gain access to very personal and very sensitive information if you don’t set everything up the way that it needs to be set up. If you’re not sure how to do this, then it is time to seek professional help. The wired network This can be a bit more difficult than the wireless network for the simple fact that you have wires you have to hide everywhere. Everything else as far as DNS, IPs, and DHCP applies because someone on the outside could still compromise your network. Again, you don’t want that to happen. What if you have financial information on your computer? Someone could very easily get a hold of credit card and bank account numbers. So again, if you have difficulty with setting up your network, it is a good idea to look into having a professional take care of the job for you. Once you have your network set up, you’ll be able to share files with the other computers in your home. You can share video files, music files, and so much more. It is a lot of fun to be able to share all of that information. It is almost like having external hard drives all over your home. You’re able to access information beyond your own hard drive and beyond the Internet. Those are the reasons why more and more homes are installing home networks. When something is stored into the “shared” folder on the computer, other computers are able to access it. Permissions can also be set to allow other folders to be accessed from another computer in the home. This is a good way to keep an eye on the kids and see what it is they’re downloading while on the Internet.

EasyTechCare for professional network installation
March 6 2009

configure routing in cisco routers?

cisco routers
abhi asked:


i have interconnected 2 cisco routers through serial ports.
for configuring routing i hav done the following
router rip
network
on both the routers

clock rate is set on dce.
router serial ips are pinging each other
but ethernet to remote serial is not pinging
wat command should i add?

wat is the purpose of giving no auto summary?

December 25 2008

How do I set up a VPN on a Cisco ASA 5510 where the remote node is on a dynamic IP address?

cisco
Dave asked:


Some VPN devices don’t have a problem with this, but the Cisco ASA device seems to demand that a fixed IP address be associated with a VPN endpoint. I need to VPN to two locations whose IPs may change, but they use a dynamic DNS service to map a static FQDN to their current IP address. I can’t figure out how to get the Cisco to use that FQDN (office1.mydomain.com, e.g.) instead of an IP address. Cisco appears to support this via some kind of “dynamic map” but I cannot figure out how to make it work. Any help or configuration examples would be much appreciated.

LAN troubleshooting
October 10 2008

Manage IP Adress

Beside simply technical build home network we learned before ( read here ), you’re also going to need Network Interface Cards (or NICs) in each computer, printer or any other device you want to be on the network. These can be your standard 10/100 ethernet cards or 802.11b/g cards which can be used for a wireless network. If you are building a wired network, you can use Ethernet equipment with 10MB or 100MB speeds.

They are both so inexpensive, that there is really no reason not to go for the 100MB equipment. These devices generally support equipment which runs in the older standard as well. There is also Gigabit Ethernet, but this is prohibitively expensive for many building a home network.

July 8 2008

Play Important Role In WLAN Security

Keeping your eye on the ball

After deployment, WLANs require maintenance and monitoring. Here, your network and system management tools can play an important role in security. For example, controllers can push AP firmware to quickly apply security patches, while AD Group Policy Objects can ensure that WLAN connections comply with security policy.

For security monitoring, some enterprises rely on WLAN infrastructure capabilities ? for example, using controller reports to document usage or flag rogue APs. If you need more visibility, deploy a Wireless IPS (WIPS).

An overlay WIPS uses a purpose-built server to analyze observations gathered by dedicated sensors, feeding alerts to a dashboard, database, and upstream Network Management System. An embedded WIPS is (to some degree) integrated with WLAN infrastructure ? for example, APs placed into monitor-only mode.

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