Thanks for your feedback, it helps us improve the site. In reply to CJLim's post on March 6, No, this is not the problem.
The password is of the type "monkey", thus, ascii. Try for your self; change the password of your router to wep 64 or bit and to a word of characters. You will not be able to login. I think it is a bug in the firmware, but I might and hope be wrong In reply to victorlaszlo's post on March 6, Message Edited by android on Mar PM.
In reply to android's post on March 8, But this problem applies to any router with password protection if the password is not 5 or 10 characters long In reply to victorlaszlo's post on March 8, On your phone when putting the wep key you knew select the hex format, if you leave it in ascii mode it will not permit you put any long keys! I could change the settings of my router, but it's not only mine that gives the problem; any router more or less. Say that the router has the password "passwd" - it's simply not possible to enter in the telephone.
Or you think I should translate it to hex and add it that way? The router, after entering an ascii formatted word, should also give you it's hex value. Enter that into the phone. The simplest way to get these two products to work together is to use Hexadecimal keys , since that method is common to both. Tip 2: Make sure your card can support the WEP level that you are trying to set!
Tip 3: Remember to enter the correct number of characters for the desired encryption level in the Lucent WEP Setup window. Eric Geier is a freelance tech writer. WPA key. The client sends an authentication request to the Access Point.
The Access Point replies with a clear-text challenge. The client encrypts the challenge-text using the configured WEP key and sends it back in another authentication request.
The Access Point decrypts the response. Fortunately, the WEP key can be easily located.
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