[Wolves] Aulas de inglês particular (11) 5894-5170 (11) 3442-6815, Aula de ...

RH Equipe Teleinfor rh at teleinfor.com.br
Wed Sep 21 20:46:48 BST 2005


Aulas de inglês particular (11) 5894-5170 (11) 3442-6815, Aula de ...WLAN
IPTABLES
Nat forward

Aulas de inglês em São Paulo

Aulas de inglês particular em São Paulo
Aulas de inglês no conforto de sua casa ou empresa dentro de São Paulo,
no horário de sua preferência ou via telefone com professores Native Like.
Descubra porque empresas e pessoas do grupo AGF, Honda do Brasil, Amada
Avaya, Danfoss do Brasil, Ambev, Lotus, Consist informática e muitas outras
preferem o nosso sistema de ensino in company de vantagens e flexibilidades,
onde estudar será como freqüentar um clube.
Você será apresentado à pessoas que gostão de falar inglês nos fins de
semana.
Atendendemos também toda área de São Paulo, porém se você se encontra
em outra localidade , entre em contato para estudarmos a possibilidade
de enviar um professor onde você está para ter aulas de inglês outra lingua.
Aulas de inglês com a English Club é muito mais inglês.






----- Original Message -----
From: "Andy Wootton" <andy.wootton at wyrley.demon.co.uk>
To: "Wolverhampton Linux User Group" <wolves at mailman.lug.org.uk>
Sent: Wednesday, September 21, 2005 4:36 PM
Subject: Re: [Wolves] wifi


> David Morley wrote:
>
> >>Yes, IPCop does support WLANs (on the Blue interface) see
>
>><http://www.ipcop.org/modules.php?op=modload&name=phpWiki&file=index&pagen
ame=IPCop140BlueVpnHowto>
> >>
> >>- --
> >>Ron Wellsted
> >>
> >>
> >Is Ipcop similar to smoothwall then, in that it runs on a separate box
> >acting as a router and a firewall?
> >
> >
> Yes, IPcop was a project forked from Smoothwall. It seems to have
> progressed faster than Smoothwall.
>
> >Also this was just theoretical as I had the sudden understanding of
> >what and how a router workedish and what dhcp did etc.
> >
> >
> The terminology is half the problem. A router is just a box with two or
> more interfaces that applies some intelligent decisions about whether to
> move  packets between them. Strictly, the protocol on both sides should
> be the same. If the protocol on different interfaces is different then
> it is a gateway because it has to do protocol conversion too. The 2
> terms are horribly misused these days. A 'wireless router' might be an
> ADSL modem, gateway, firewall, router and DHCP server in one box..
>
> You can buy Wireless Access Points (WAPs) to add into an existing
> Ethernet (about £40.) They seem to be an Ethernet/Wirless gateway and
> some control software. If you only have two wireless nodes they can talk
> to each other without a WAP. Whether a Linux box can be a WAP depends on
> whether you can get your hands on the 'control software'. I don't know
> but I did see a discussion suggesting free software was in development a
> few months ago. I'll leave the Googling to you. Let us all know what you
> find.
>
> >But I saw the cost benefit more for people running a smoothwall box/
> >ipcop box.  A good wireless router is about £80 if you need a pcmcia
> >card too then more.  You can however pick a pci wireless card for
> >15-20 quid same for a pcmcia card, so for half the cost of the router
> >you have a full wireless system.
> >
> Ebuyer are selling 3Com USB 2 wireless 'sticks' for £15. I've got one of
> these and a Netgear WAP for my daughter on order.
>
> Woo
>
> _______________________________________________
> Wolves LUG mailing list
> Homepage: http://www.wolveslug.org.uk/
> Mailing list: Wolves at mailman.lug.org.uk
> Mailing list home: http://mailman.lug.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/wolves
>
>




More information about the Wolves mailing list