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APHopper
APHopper Tooltip
Hits: 24
Date added: 09/05/2005
AP Hopper is a program that automatically hops between access points of different wireless networks. It checks for DHCP and Internet Access on all the networks found. It logs successful and unsuccessful attempts.
Details
 
Linux Wlan Drivers 0.2.1
Linux Wlan Drivers 0.2.1 Tooltip
Hits: 23
Date added: 10/02/2005
Driver support for Prism2/2.5/3 PCMCIA, PCI, and USB devices, the best chipset for wireless hacking and wardriving
Details
 
AirFart
AirFart Tooltip
Hits: 22
Date added: 10/26/2005
AirFart is a wireless tool created to detect wireless devices, calculate their signal strengths, and present them to the user in an easy-to-understand fashion.Airfart supports all wireless network cards supported by the linux-wlan-ng Prism2 driver that...
Details
 
Wavemon
Wavemon Tooltip
Hits: 22
Date added: 09/11/2005
Wavemon is a ncurses-based monitoring application for wireless network devices. It currently works under Linux with devices that are supported by the wireless extensions by Jean Tourrilhes (included in Kernel 2.4 and higher), e.g. the Lucent Orinoco cards.
Details
 
gWireless v0.8
gWireless v0.8 Tooltip
Hits: 22
Date added: 09/08/2005
This project aims to create a GNOME-based panel applet and management tool to manage wireless network cards that support Linux wireless extensions. You can find a list of such cards at Jean Tourrilhes's Linux Wireless LANs page. Many IEEE 802.11 compatible cards fall into this category, including the Lucent Orinoco and Applet Airport. The complete set of tools is called gWireless. Currently, gWireless consists of two basic tools which are in early development stages. The most visible tool (and one that works with basic functionality today) is a link quality monitor applet (called gwireless_applet). Quality is displayed by altering green and red values of the applet. The better the link quality, the more green the display. Red values are the complement (? ... max - green value) of the green values (for example, if green is 255 then red is 0, green 200 then red 55, etc.). So, red is bad, orange (or muddy brown) is moderate to poor, and green is good. The applet will display blue if there are no wireless adapters listed in /proc/net/wireless.
Details
 
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