Re: Using Debian as a HotSpot??

2004-05-18 Thread Robin Millette
Pebble is a debian based smallish distro: http://www.nycwireless.net/pebble/ île sans fil ( http://www.ilesansfil.org/ ) has succesfully deployed it in a few venues in Montreal. Check our wiki for more details: http://www.ilesansfil.org/wiki/ -- Robin Millette (aka Lord D. Nattor) Dors-je?

Re: Using Debian as a HotSpot??

2004-05-18 Thread Robin Millette
Pebble is a debian based smallish distro: http://www.nycwireless.net/pebble/ île sans fil ( http://www.ilesansfil.org/ ) has succesfully deployed it in a few venues in Montreal. Check our wiki for more details: http://www.ilesansfil.org/wiki/ -- Robin Millette (aka Lord D. Nattor) Dors-je?

Using Debian as a HotSpot??

2004-05-15 Thread Penbrock
My company had installed a few Toshiba HotSpot routers. They are set up to ask for a code number or a credit card to allow access for 1,2 or 24 hours of Internet access. Everything was working fine until Toshiba told us they are dropping the service. Does anyone know of this type of HotSpot

Re: Using Debian as a HotSpot??

2004-05-15 Thread Torsten Krueger
On Sat, 15 May 2004, Penbrock wrote: My company had installed a few Toshiba HotSpot routers. They are set up to ask for a code number or a credit card to allow access for 1,2 or 24 hours of Internet access. Everything was working fine until Toshiba told us they are dropping the service. Does

Using Debian as a HotSpot??

2004-05-15 Thread Penbrock
My company had installed a few Toshiba HotSpot routers. They are set up to ask for a code number or a credit card to allow access for 1,2 or 24 hours of Internet access. Everything was working fine until Toshiba told us they are dropping the service. Does anyone know of this type of HotSpot