Rabu, 12 Agustus 2009

USB Modem User's Guide

Mobile Stream USB Modem User's Guide
Version 1.59 for PalmOS
Contents
1.Introduction............................................................................................................................................2
1.1.About USB Modem.........................................................................................................................2
1.1.1.USB Modem Features..............................................................................................................2
2.Using USB Modem with Windows XP/2000/Vista ................................................................................3
2.1.Installation...................................................................................................................................... 3
2.1.1.Installing the USB Driver........................................................................................................ 3
2.2.Connecting via USB........................................................................................................................3
2.2.1.Creating a New Connection.....................................................................................................4
2.3.Connecting via Bluetooth................................................................................................................5
2.4.Upgrading.......................................................................................................................................5
2.4.1.Upgrading the USB Modem Driver.........................................................................................5
3.Using USB Modem with Mac OS X.......................................................................................................6
3.1.Requirements..................................................................................................................................6
3.2.Installation...................................................................................................................................... 6
3.3.Connecting via USB........................................................................................................................6
3.3.1.Configuring a USB Network Port........................................................................................... 6
3.4.Connecting via Bluetooth................................................................................................................7
3.4.1.Configuring a Bluetooth Network Port....................................................................................7
3.5.Upgrading.......................................................................................................................................9
3.5.1.Upgrading to version 1.50 or higher........................................................................................9
4.Using USB Modem with Linux............................................................................................................ 10
4.1.Requirements................................................................................................................................10
4.2.Installation.................................................................................................................................... 10
4.3.Setting up a PPP Connection.........................................................................................................10
4.4.Connecting via USB......................................................................................................................10
4.5.Connecting via Bluetooth..............................................................................................................11
4.6.Upgrading.....................................................................................................................................11
5.Troubleshooting................................................................................................................................... 12
5.1.Cannot Connect via Bluetooth on Treo 700p/755p/Treo 680 or Centro.......................................12
5.2.Windows cannot find the USB driver for palm Centro.................................................................12
Copyright © 2006-2007 Mobile Stream. All rights reserved.
No part of this USB Modem User’s Guide may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or
transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photographic, magnetic, or
otherwise, without the prior written permission of Mobile Stream.
1. Introduction
1.1. About USB Modem
USB Modem allows you to use Treo 600, Treo 650, Treo 680, Treo 700p, Treo 755p and Centro
smartphones as a USB modem for connecting a desktop or notebook computer to Internet. To surf the
Internet from your PC you will need only a USB cable and a Treo with GPRS/EDGE service or CDMA
data plan. Bluetooth connection is also supported.
1.1.1. USB Modem Features
● Support for Treo 600, Treo 650, Treo 680, Treo 700p, Treo 755p and Centro smartphones
● Support for Windows XP/2000/Vista, Mac OS X and Linux operating systems
● Support for USB and Bluetooth connectivity
● Support for Background mode so it is possible to make outgoing voice calls or perform other
activity on the Treo without disabling the modem mode
● Small memory footprint (35 KB)
Page 2 of 12
2. Using USB Modem with Windows XP/2000/Vista
2.1. Installation
Unzip the USB Modem archive anywhere on your disk. Windows XP and Vista understand .zip files
out of the box, but for Windows 2000 you will need WinZip or other similar program to extract the
files. Install USBModem.prc in the Treo RAM (not a card) using a HotSync or by other means. Refer to
the Upgrading section below for instructions if the older version was ever installed on your device.
This is especially important when upgrading from early version 1.58 of USB Modem.
2.1.1. Installing the USB Driver
Make sure that USB Modem is installed on your Treo.
1. Login into Windows PC with the Administrator privileges.
2. Connect your Treo with the USB Modem application installed to the PC using a USB cable.
3. Launch the USB Modem application, set the Connectivity method to USB and enable the
modem mode. A balloon with the text “Treo 650 USB Modem” (or named according to your
actual device) will be popped up near the Windows tray.
4. After a short period of time the Found New Hardware Wizard screen will appear. Select the
No, not this time option and press the Next button.
5. Select the Install from a list or specific location option on the displayed dialog and press the
Next button.
6. The Please choose your search and installation options dialog will appear on the screen.
Uncheck the Search removable media option, and use the Browse button to point to the
drivers\windows folder in the unzipped USB Modem distribution. After that, press the Next
button.
7. The installation will be started and the Hardware Installation warning will be displayed. Press
the Continue Anyway button to go on with the installation.
8. After that, the Completing the Found New Hardware Wizard screen will appear. Press the
Finish button.
9. The USB Modem driver installation is now complete and Windows will pop up a balloon with
the text “Your new hardware is installed and ready to use”.
2.2. Connecting via USB
You need to create and configure a new Windows network connection to go to the Internet using a Treo
with the USB Modem application installed. The instructions are provided in the
Creating a New Connection section below.
Once the connection is configured, you just need to connect the Treo with a USB cable to your PC,
start USB Modem, set the Connectivity method to USB, enable the modem mode on Treo and start
Page 3 of 12
the connection on the PC.
To disconnect, tap on the active connection icon in the Windows tray, select the Disconnect option,
wait a few seconds while the connection is shutting down and disable the modem mode on the Treo.
2.2.1. Creating a New Connection
The connection setup procedure must be performed after a successful installation of the USB Modem
driver.
1. Consult your wireless provider on the important parameters that are necessary to setup the
connection. These include the dial number, user name and password. For GPRS or EDGE
connections the access point name (APN) is also required.
2. Start the Create a new Connection wizard. To do this, press the Windows Start button, select
Connect To, choose Show all connections and look for the wizard in the Network Tasks area
in left of the panel. Alternatively, go into Windows Control Panel and choose the
Network Connections item.
3. The Welcome to the New Connection Wizard screen will be displayed. Press the Next button
to proceed.
4. The Network Connection Type screen will be displayed. Select the Connect to the Internet
and press the Next button.
5. The Getting Ready dialog will appear. Select the Set up my connection manually option and
press the Next button.
6. The Internet Connection dialog will appear. Choose the Connect using a dial-up modem
and press the Next button to proceed.
7. The Connection Name screen will be displayed. Type in the name of the connection. For
example, Internet via Treo USB Modem looks good. Press the Next button.
8. The Phone Number to Dial screen will be displayed. Type in the dial number provided by the
wireless operator and press the Next button. Usually the number is #777 for CDMA networks
and *99***1# (or just *99#) for GSM networks.
9. The Internet Account Information screen will be displayed. Enter the user name and
password as provided by the wireless operator, disable the Make this the default Internet
connection checkbox and press the Next button.
10.The Completing the New Connection Wizard screen will be displayed. Enable the
Add a shortcut to this connection to my desktop for easy connection access and press the
Finish button.
11.This step is necessary for GPRS or EDGE connections only. Proceed directly to step 12 for
CDMA data connection!
1. Connect your Treo to the PC using a USB cable and enable the modem mode in the
USB Modem application. Press the Windows Start button, select Control Panel,
launch the Phone and Modem Options panel, select the Treo 650 USB Modem entry
(or named according to your actual device) in the Modems tab and press the Properties
button.
Page 4 of 12
2. In the Treo USB Modem Properties dialog select the Advanced tab and type in the
string AT+CGDCONT=1,”IP”,” APN ” in the Extra Initialization Commands field.
APN is the access point name provided by the wireless operator. Make sure all the
quotes are typed correctly. Press the OK button to exit the
Treo USB Modem Properties dialog and return to the Phone and Modem Options
panel. Close it as well.
12.Now start the Connect Internet via Treo USB Modem dialog by double-clicking on its icon
on the Windows desktop and press the Properties button.
13.The connection properties dialog will be displayed. Make sure the Use dialing rules option is
disabled and press the OK button.
14.The GPRS or CDMA data connection setup using a Treo with a USB Modem application is
finished. Make sure the Treo is connected to a PC using a USB cable, enable the modem mode
and press the Dial button to connect to the Internet.
2.3. Connecting via Bluetooth
Connection via Bluetooth is intended primarily for the wireless operator branded units with the
disabled or limited Bluetooth DUN functionality. Since there are many Windows Bluetooth stacks
available (e.g. Microsoft, Broadcom/WIDCOMM, BlueSoleil or Toshiba), the connection setup is not
described here. Consult the documentation that comes with your Bluetooh software on setting up the
DUN connection.
Notice for Treo 700p/755p/680 and Centro users: choose the “Mobile Stream DUN” service instead of
the standard “Dial-up networking” when connecting if you did not select the Suppress Built-in DUN
option in the USB Modem.
2.4. Upgrading
To uprade USB Modem to a new version just install the new USBModem.prc file on the Treo and start
the application. When upgrading from the USB Modem version 1.58 or earlier it is necessary to
reinstall the USB driver on a PC. This is described in the section Upgrading the USB Modem Driver
below.
2.4.1. Upgrading the USB Modem Driver
1. Press the Windows Start button, select Control Panel, enter the Phone and Modem Options
panel, go into the Modems tab, select the Treo 650 USB Modem entry and uninstall it by
pressing the Remove button.
2. Now, make sure the new version of USBModem.prc is installed on the Treo and install the new
driver as described in the Installing the USB Driver section above.
Page 5 of 12
3. Using USB Modem with Mac OS X
3.1. Requirements
Mac OS X version 10.4 (Tiger) or higher is required for the USB or Bluetooth connection via Treo
with USB Modem installed to work. Mac OS X version 10.2, 10.3 or Mac OS X 10.1 may work too
but are not officially supported. Moreover, the AppleUSBCDCDriver Patch (downloadable from
Apple's site) has to be installed for Mac OS X 10.1 for the USB connection support.
Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard) was in closed beta at the time of the release but should be compatible with
USB Modem.
3.2. Installation
Unzip the USB Modem archive anywhere on your Mac. Install USBModem.prc in the Treo RAM (not
a card) using a HotSync, Missing Sync or by other means. Also copy the Mobile Stream CDMA and
Mobile Stream GSM files from the drivers/macosx directory in the unzipped USB Modem distribution
to the /Library/Modem Scripts folder on your Mac.
3.3. Connecting via USB
You need to configure the USB Modem network port before using the Internet connection. See the
Configuring a USB Network Port section below.
To connect, plug the Treo using a USB cable into your Mac, set the Connectivity method to USB,
enable the modem mode on the Treo and start the connection. There are plenty ways to do this. The
easiest one is to tap on the phone connection icon in the right side of the Mac OS X menu bar and
select the Connect item in the pull-down list. For GPRS or EDGE networks the additional message
box will appear asking for the access point name (APN). Type it in and press the OK button to
continue connecting. Note, if you see the Mac OS X message saying that it can't find the device, though
the Treo is attached and modem mode is enabled, go to the System Preferences -> Network dialog,
choose the Treo 650 USB Modem (or according to your actual device) configuration panel, press the
Apply Now button and try to reconnect.
To disconnect, choose the Disconnect action in the connection's pull-down menu.
3.3.1. Configuring a USB Network Port
It is assumed that USB Modem was successfully installed as described in the Installation section
above.
1. Consult your wireless provider on the important parameters that are necessary to setup the
connection. These include the dial number, user name and password (the latter two may be
blank). For GPRS or EDGE connections the access point name (APN) is also required.
2. Connect your Treo with the USB Modem application installed to the Mac using a USB cable.
3. Start the USB Modem application on the Treo, set the Connectivity method to USB and
enable the modem mode.
Page 6 of 12
4. Go into System Preferences -> Network. You should see the New Port Detected message box
that says that a new network port called Treo 650 USB Modem (or according to your actual
device) has been detected. Press the OK button to proceed. Sometimes you would not see this
message box. This might happen if the Network panel was launched too fast after enabling the
modem mode on the Treo and the system did not enumerate the USB bus yet. In this case close
the System Preferences, disable the modem mode on the Treo then enable it again and repeat
this step.
5. Select the Treo 650 USB Modem item in the Show pull-down list.
6. Properties for the network port will be displayed. Go to the Modem tab and select either
Mobile Stream CDMA option (for CDMA 1xRTT or EvDO networks) or
Mobile Stream GSM option (for GSM GPRS or EDGE networks) in the Modem pull-down
menu. It is recommended to disable the Wait for dial tone before dialing option.
7. Go back to the PPP tab, type in the optional Service Provider name (e.g. Internet via Treo
USB Modem), fill in the Account Name, Password and Telephone Number fields with the
values you got from your provider. Usually the number is #777 for CDMA networks and
*99***1# for GSM networks.
8. Now press the PPP Options... button and disable the Send PPP Echo packets and
Use TCP header compression options in the dialog then press the OK button. Note that with
Verizon you may actually need to enable the Send PPP Echo packets option to prevent
disconnecting after short period of inactivity.
9. Press the Apply Now button to save the network port settings.
10. Press the Dial Now button. In the displayed dialog press the Connect button to start the
connection. Note that for GPRS or EDGE connection the additional message box will appear
asking for the access point name (APN). Provide it and press the OK button to go on with the
connection process.
3.4. Connecting via Bluetooth
You need to configure the Bluetooth network port before using the Internet connection. See the
Configuring a Bluetooth Network Port section below. Take care of the Treo 680/700p/755p specific
setup (step 12) if you have such a device.
To connect, set the Treo Bluetooth in the discoverable mode, launch the USB Modem application, set
the Connectivity method to Bluetooth, enable the modem mode on the Treo and start the connection
on the Mac. There are plenty ways to do this. The easiest one is to tap on the phone connection icon in
the right side of the Mac OS X menu bar and select the Connect item in the pull-down list. For GPRS
or EDGE networks the additional message box will appear asking for the access point name (APN).
Type it in and press the OK button to continue connecting.
To disconnect, choose the Disconnect action in the connection's pull-down menu.
3.4.1. Configuring a Bluetooth Network Port
It is assumed that USB Modem was successfully installed as described in the Installation section
above.
Page 7 of 12
1. Consult your wireless provider on the important parameters that are necessary to setup the
connection. These include the dial number, user name and password (the latter two may be
blank). For GPRS or EDGE connections the access point name (APN) is also required.
2. Enable the Bluetooth on the Treo and set it to the discoverable mode. To do this go into
Preferences -> Bluetooth and either set the Discoverable option to Yes (for Treo 650) or set
the Visibility option to Visible (for Treo 700p or later).
3. Start the USB Modem application on the Treo, set the Connectivity method to Bluetooth and
enable the modem mode.
4. Go into Mac OS X System Preferences -> Bluetooth and press the Set Up New Device...
button in the Devices tab to start the Bluetooth Setup Assistant. Press the Continue button to
skip the Introduction dialog.
5. The Select Device Type dialog will be displayed. Choose the Mobile phone option and press
the Continue button.
6. The Searching for your mobile phone dialog will be displayed. Wait until your Treo appears
in the Mobile Phones list (under the same name as your HotSync identifier) and press the
Continue button.
7. The Gathering information about your device dialog will be displayed. Wait until the
Continue button becomes available and press it.
8. The Pairing with the mobile phone dialog will be displayed with the passkey code. Enter this
code on the Treo to pair it with Mac.
9. Enable the Access the Internet with your phone's data connection option and press the
Continue button.
10. Fill the Username, Password and GPRS CID String (this is a dial number, use #777 for
CDMA networks and *99***1# for GSM networks) with the correct values. Also select either
the Mobile Stream CDMA option (for CDMA 1xRTT or EvDO networks) or the
Mobile Stream GSM option (for GSM GPRS or EDGE networks) in the Modem Script pulldown
list and press the Continue button.
11. Press the Quit button to close the Bluetooth Setup Assistant and return to the Bluetooth
control panel.
12. Additional setup is necessary for Treo 700p/755p or Treo 680 unless you selected the
Suppress Built-in DUN option on the first launch of USB Modem. Proceed directly to step 13
if you have Treo 650.
1. Select the just added device in the Bluetooth Devices list and press the
Edit Serial Ports... button.
2. Make sure that the entry with the Mobile Stream DUN service is enabled and listed
before the entry with the Dial-up networking service then press the Apply button.
13. Go into Mac OS X System Preferences -> Network, select the Bluetooth item and press the
Configure button.
14. The properties dialog for the Bluetooth connection will be displayed. Press the PPP Options...
button, disable the Send PPP Echo packets and Use TCP header compression options then
Page 8 of 12
press the OK button. Note that with Verizon you may actually need to enable the
Send PPP Echo packets option to prevent disconnecting after a short period of inactivity.
15. Press the Apply Now button and close the Network control panel.
3.5. Upgrading
To uprade USB Modem to a new version just install the new USBModem.prc file on the Treo and copy
new versions of the Mobile Stream CDMA and Mobile Stream GSM files to the
/Library/Modem Scripts folder on your Mac.
3.5.1. Upgrading to version 1.50 or higher
This note is valid only when upgrading from USB Modem version 1.42 or earlier to version 1.50 or
higher. Mac OS X will display a message saying that it can't find the device when you try to connect
for the first time after installing the new version of USB Modem on the Treo. This is a side effect of
the important bug fix and should not be considered an error. To restore the normal operation,
reconfigure the USB Modem network port as described above.
Page 9 of 12
4. Using USB Modem with Linux
4.1. Requirements
Modern Linux distribution with the USB CDC ACM class support in the kernel (either built-in or as
module cdc-acm.ko) is required.
4.2. Installation
Unzip the USB Modem archive anywhere on your Linux computer. Install USBModem.prc in the Treo
RAM (not a card) using a HotSync or by other means.
4.3. Setting up a PPP Connection
1. Obtain the user name, password and dial number from your wireless provider. For GSM
networks the access point name (APN) is also required.
2. Copy either ppp-script-edge-template (for GSM GPRS/EDGE networks) or ppp-script-evdotemplate
(for CDMA 1xRTT or EvDO networks) file from the USB Modem distribution to
/etc/ppp/peers/ppp-script-treo (you may need to create the path manually), replacing the
USERNAME and APN (for GSM only) words with the correct values.
3. Add the user name and password line from the pap-secrets-template to the /etc/ppp/papsecrets
file, replacing the USERNAME and PASSWORD words with the correct values.
4. Test the connection.
See the drivers/linux/mts folder for the complete pppd example scripts tuned up for the MTS GSM
operator.
4.4. Connecting via USB
First of all, configure the Linux PPP connection as described in the Setting up a PPP Connection
section above.
To connect your Treo using a USB cable to the Linux computer, start the USB Modem application on
the Treo, set the Connectivity method to USB and enable the modem mode. Now type in the
command prompt:
bash-2.05# pppd /dev/ttyACM0 call ppp-script-treo
It will print how the connection setup is performed. If it was successful a new network interface will be
created (usually ppp0). The only thing left is to copy the content of /etc/ppp/resolv.conf to system-wide
/etc/resolv.conf for proper name resolution:
bash-2.05# cat /etc/ppp/resolv.conf > /etc/resolv.conf
Note: for some newer Linux distributions (such as Fedora Core 3) do the following instead of the above
step:
bash-2.05# ln -s /var/run/ppp/resolv.conf /etc/resolv.conf
Page 10 of 12
To disconnect, stop the pppd process like below:
bash-2.05# kill
4.5. Connecting via Bluetooth
Generally a setup consists of two major steps:
1. Configure the RFCOMM channel to Treo and get a device node for it. The exact meaning of
this depends on the Linux Bluetooth stack and distribution.
2. Configure the PPP connection as described above and start just like with the USB case but use
the device node from the first step instead of the /dev/ttyACM0
4.6. Upgrading
To upgrade USB Modem to a new version install the new USBModem.prc file on the Treo and update
the pppd scripts from the new templates.
Page 11 of 12
5. Troubleshooting
5.1. Cannot Connect via Bluetooth on Treo 700p/755p/Treo 680 or Centro
Try to use the Suppress Built-in DUN option in the USB Modem menu.
5.2. Windows cannot find the USB driver for palm Centro
Make sure to reinstall the USB driver from the USB Modem package.
Page 12 of 12

USB Modem

USB Modem allows you to use Windows Mobile based devices as a USB/Bluetooth modem for connecting a desktop/notebook computer to the Internet. To surf the Internet from your PC you will need only a USB cable or Bluetooth adapter and a smartphone/communicator with GPRS/EDGE service or CDMA 1x/EvDO data plan. However, for more reliable work with Sprint or Verizon carriers you may need to purchase their tethering plan.

Please note that if USB Modem stops working after you have upgraded to Mac OS 10.5.5, you should try to delete the existing USB Modem-related network port in System Preferences, then create it from scratch as described in the manual.

Features

  • Support for Windows Mobile 5.0, 6.0, 6.1 devices
  • Support for Windows Vista/XP/2000, Mac OS X and Linux operating systems
  • Support for USB, Bluetooth and Infrared (IrCOMM) connectivity

USB Modem User's Guide

Volume discounts

  • 2 - 5 copies : 20% OFF
  • 6 - 10 copies : 30% OFF
  • 11 - 20 copies : 40% OFF
  • 21+ copies : 50% OFF

Frequently asked questions on USB Modem

Please try the demo before purchasing the software to see if it is compatible with your cellular operator environment.

Disclaimer. We will accept no responsibility for the use or misuse of our software, for any damage that may be caused by the software or the software possible lack of suitability. We are not responsible for any charges you may incur from your cellular provider as a result of using USB Modem.

Senin, 10 Agustus 2009

Troubleshooting

Description

  • Can I run WinBox on Linux?
  • Yes, you can run WinBox and connect to RouterOS, using Wine
  • I cannot open the Winbox Console

    Check the port and address for www service in /ip service print list. Make sure the address you are connecting from matches the network you've specified in address field and that you've specified the correct port in the Winbox loader. The command /ip service set www port=80 address=0.0.0.0/0 will change these values to the default ones so you will be able to connect specifying just the correct address of the router in the address field of Winbox loader

  • The Winbox Console uses TCP port 8291. Make sure you have access to it through the firewall.

Minggu, 09 Agustus 2009

The internal components of a typical keydrive

Usbkey internals.jpg

The internal components of a typical keydrive

This photograph shows both sides of the printed circuit board inside a typical keydrive (Seitec USB-BAR USB 1.1circa 2004), in this case an inexpensive 64 Mbyte USB2.0 device. The plastic clamshell case has been removed.

In practice the keydrive consists of only two significant components. The first is the flash memory part (item 4 in the diagram), a generic device that might as easily be found in a digital camera's memory card. The second (item 2 in the diagram) is a device which implements the USB networking and mass-storage interface, and which knows how to make a chunk of generic flash memory appear like a normal disk drive. The high degree of integration in this latter part makes small, inexpensive keydrives possible.

The parts of the device are as follows:

  1. A male type-A USB connector.
  2. An Ours Technology Inc. OTi-2168 USB 2.0 mass storage controller. This implements the USB 2.0 host controller, and provides a seamless linear interface to block-oriented serial flash devices, while hiding the complexities of block-orientation, block erasure, and wear balancing. It contains a small RISC microprocessor and a small amount of ROM and RAM. This communicates with the Hynix device over an 8-line unified address/data bus. This version is a 7x7mm 48-pin LQFP (Low Profile Quad Flat Pack) surface-mount device (info).
  3. JP1 and JP2: two unpopulated 10-pin connectors, used for testing during the keydrive's manufacture.
  4. A Hynix Semiconductor HY27USxx121M series NAND Flash memory device, featuring 4096 independently erasable blocks each providing 16 Kbytes of storage, yielding a total of 64 Mbytes of usable storage. The version used in this keydrive is a 20x12mm 48-pin TSOP1 (Thin Small Outline Package) surface-mount package (info) (datasheet).
  5. An SKC Shin Chang Electronics 12.000 MHz crystal oscillator (XTAL). The OTi device runs the output of this through a phase-locked loop to produce its main 12 MHz clock signal.
  6. A single yellow light-emitting diode (run from a pin on the OTi device) which flashes to indicate activity.
  7. A simple two-position switch, used to indicate whether the device should be in "write-protect" mode. It is shown here in the make position, indicating write-protect is off.
  8. An unpopulated space for a second TSOP1 memory package. The OTi device is capable of driving up to eight such devices. Having this second space allows the manufacturer to choose (generally on a cost basis) whether to use one or two TSOP flash parts.

Surrounding these main components are a number of tiny surface-mount resistors (many of them serving as pull-ups) and capacitors.

For a closeup of an area of this keydrive, see this image.

USB Flash Drive in Windows

Microsoft's operating system mengimplementasikan USB flash drive's Windows as USB Mass Storage Device, wield device driver usbstor.sys. Since really Windows have auto mounting's feature, and USB Flash Drive constitutes one plug and play's peripheral, Windows will try to carry on its one can maybe momentary that peripheral is plugged into USB'S socket. Windows xp and later one even have Autoplay's feature, one that concedes flash drive that was accessed as a whole to determine what content from USB Flash Drive that.

Latterly, there are many local computer virus as well as Brontok / RontokBro, PendekarBlank, and another local virus utilizes USB Flash Drive as media of virus transmission of one host goes to another host, replacing diskette. Viruses that largely walks Windows above that will get quick circulating while really Windows accesses drive teserbut to utilize proprietary autoplay feature by Windows. Hence, there is it is better to deactivate autoplay's feature, even it less just after helps to prevent broadcast virus.

USB flash drive

USB flash drive is data stored tool flash's memory NAND'S type that have integrated USB interface. Flash drive this usually gets pocket edition, demulcent, and can be read and ditulisi easily. Per November 2006, reserve for capacity USB Flash Drive there is of 128 megabyte until 64 gigabyte.

USB flash drive has a lot of excess than another data storage tool, notably diskette or solid the disk. This tool is faster, little, with greater capacity, and more gets to be relied (since have no a part one moves) than diskette.

winbox

General Information

Summary

The MikroTik RouterOS can be configured remotely, using Telnet, SSH, WinBox Console or Webbox. In this manual we will discuss how to use the interactive WinBox console.

Description

The Winbox console is used for accessing the MikroTik Router configuration and management features, using graphical user interface (GUI).

All Winbox interface functions are as close as possible to Cons

ole fun

ctions: all Winbox functions are exactly in the same hierarchy in Terminal Console and vice versa (except functions that are not implemented in Winbox). That is w

hy there are no Winbox sec

tions in the manual.

The Winbox Console plugin loader, the winbox.exe program, can

be retrieved from the MikroTik router, the URL is http

://router_address/winbox/winbox.exe Use any web browser on Windows 95/98/ME/NT4.0/2000/XP or Linux to retrieve the winbox.exe executa

ble file from Router. If your rout

er is not specifically configured, you can also type in the web-browser just http://router_address

The Winbox plugins are cached on the local disk for each Mikr

oTik RouterOS version. The plugins are not downloaded, if they

are in the cache, and the ro

uter has not been upgraded since the last time it has been accessed.

Starting the Winbox Console

When connecting to the MikroTik router via http (TCP port 80 by default), the router's Welcome Page is displayed in the web browser:


By clicking on the Winbox link you can start the winbox.exe down

load. Choose Open to start the Winbox loader program (you can

also save this program to your local d

isk, and run it from there)

The winbox.exe program opens the Winbox login window.

where:

discovers and shows MNDP (MikroTik Neighbor Discovery Protocol) or CDP (Cisco Discovery Protocol) devices.

  • logs on to the router by specified IP address (and the port number if you have changed it from the default value of 80) or MAC Address (if the router is in the same subnet), user name, and password.

  • saves the current sessions to the list (to run them, just double-click on an item).

  • removes selected item from the list.

  • removes all items from the list, clears cache on the local disk, imports addresses from wbx file or exports them to wbx file.


  • Secure Mode

    provides privacy and data integrity between WinBox and RouterOS by means of TLS (Transport Layer Security) protocol.

  • Keep Password

    Saves password as a plain text on a local hard drive. Warning

    : storing passwords in plain text allows anybody with access to your files to read the password from there.

The Winbox Console of the router:


The Winbox Console uses TCP port 8291. After logging onto the router you can work with the MikroTik router's configuration through the Winbox console and perform the same tasks as using the regular console.

Overview of Common Functions

You can use the menu bar to navigate through the router's configuration menus, open configuration windows. By double clicking on some list items in the windows you can open configuration windows for the specific items, and so on.

There are some hints for using the Winbox Console:

  • To open the required window, simply click on the corresponding menu item
  • Add a new entry

  • Remove an existing entry

  • Enable an item

  • Disable an item

  • Make or edit a comment

  • Refresh a window

  • Undo an action

  • Redo an action

  • Logout from the Winbox Console


Sabtu, 08 Agustus 2009

antara benci dan bahagia

Dunia ini semakin sempit
Itu dan aku semakin ingin pergi
Tak ada satupun cahaya dalam hening
Hati membeku dan menjadi batu
Akankah semua itu tepati janji?
Ruang maaf di hati ini sudah tak muat di
Isi dengan omong kosong mereka
Zopfan pun semakin jauh
Kalau gembira datang memang aku butuh
Yang yakin pada kabar itu
Semakin jauh itu semakin aku
Iri pada mereka yang telah
Lama menjadi bahagia dengan segudang
Virus kebencian pada diriku
Andaikan nanti aku bisa melihat mimpi
Nyata pada rasa kebahagiaan dan
Yakin akan hari esok yang bahagia.