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atwork di Alberto Turelli - soluzioni software & web.

  • Certificazioni GNU/Linux LPIC-1 e LPIC-2
  • Certificazioni MySQL 5.0 Developer e DBA

  • Consulenza relativa a GNU/Linux (Debian in particolare) e al software libero
  • Migrazione di server, workstation e reti da Windows a GNU/Linux
  • Installazione, configurazione e manutenzione dei seguenti servizi su piattaforma GNU/Linux:
    • Server web (Apache, Tomcat)
    • Server database (MySQL)
    • Server email (Postfix, Qmail, Courier) con filtri antispam (Spamassassin) e antivirus (ClamAV)
  • Configurazione ed amministrazione di reti GNU/Linux e di reti miste (Windows, GNU/Linux, BSD, Unix, Mac OS X)
  • Progettazione e realizzazione di database e applicativi web-based (HTML/CSS/Javascript, PHP, JSP e MySQL)
  • Sviluppo software in Java
  • Installazione, configurazione e manutenzione portali con Joomla! e Mambo
  • Corsi GNU/Linux: introduzione, amministrazione del sistema, server, desktop, sicurezza
  • Corsi per certificazioni: GNU/Linux (LPIC-1 e LPIC-2) e MySQL (Core, Professional, 5.0 Developer e 5.0 DBA)

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Linux.com :: CLI Magic: Kismet sniffs out Wi-Fi access PDF Print E-mail
Written by bibe   
Wednesday, 13 September 2006
Today, Wi-Fi access points everywhere, and users becoming increasingly more sophisticated in their wireless network knowledge. One good tool for discovering Wi-Fi access points is a command-line utility called Kismet. It can help with a range of issues, from diagnosing Wi-Fi interference problems to finding a particular network in a sea of airborne bits.
For example, while configuring your own access point, you can use Kismet to see which channels are being used in your area. Start Kismet and let it run for a few minutes with channel-hopping enabled, so Kismet can scan the entire range of Wi-Fi channels, and it will find all the access points within range. You can then set your access point to an unused channel, thereby minimizing potential interference from all the other ones. Once your wireless network is configured, Kismet can check that you're on your chosen channel and that encryption is working.
Read more on Linux.com
 
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