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Booth is right. Reselling the cable broadband service will almost certainly be a TOS violation. How is the cel phone reception at your father-in-laws? Get a data card for your laptop or get a cel plan that lets you tether the cel phone to the laptop & use the cel connection for data. If you get EvDO or EDGE speed it's about as good as decent DSL and still supports VPN, etc. Sprint's phone-as-modem plan is $40 a month on top of whatever your cel minutes cost and it includes unlimited data, legal tethering, and any other data your cel can work with (streaming audio/video, email, SMS, browsing, whatever). It's a complete data plan for your cel device + your laptop. I use it with a Treo 700p and because I have it solely for work usage, work reimburses me for the expense. John A. Jones, CISSP Americas Information Security Officer Jones Lang LaSalle, Inc. V: +1-630-455-2787 F: +1-312-601-1782 john.jones@xxxxxxxxxx -----Original Message----- From: pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Booth Martin Sent: Thursday, August 10, 2006 5:35 PM To: PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users Subject: Re: [PCTECH] Secure? Installing a wireless router at next door neighbor's so I can surf Is this in any way related to work? Could you explain the situation to your employer and ask him to split the cost? The setup you describe is in fact against the agreements she's signed with the cable company. The last thing you need is to get her in trouble with the cable company. You'll want to get a cordless phone to use the vonage feature. Maybe if she has the phone for long distance, that'd be enough pay for her? Dan wrote:
I am in a situation where I am away from home several nights per week,
staying with my father-in-law who, surprise surprise, has no broadband
access. Part of my job duties require me participate in a weekly rotation to log in and monitor some jobs at 9:30 in the evening. Last
night, for the second night in a row, I had to drive a few miles into town to find a wireless hotspot to do this. I'm really not going to want to be doing this in January, though. Anyway, given that the cheapest I could get broadband at my father-in-law's was in the $45/month range, I proposed to my father-in-law's neighbor, who has cable internet, that I would split the cost of her internet-related fees if she would allow me to install
a wireless router in her home. She thought that was a dandy idea. The distance between the router and my laptop would be approximately
30 feet max.
Today, I bought a Linksys/Vonage router for free after rebate (no obligation to get Vonage service - that was yet another rebate) at CompUSA. (FYI, it's a Vonage Linksys Wireless-G Broadband Router With
VoIP, 802.11g,b, SKU 316790. Don't trust the out-of-stock messages on
their website, speak to a human at the store you shop at.) But this is a situation where I don't have total control over the wireless router, since I don't have possession of it. Since I connect
to work via a VPN connection (using the Contivity VPN client), and surf the internet through that VPN, that should be secure against *any* snooping, right? On my laptop, I can set up the connection so that I know I'm utilizing WPA, and I would consider that a first line of defense from "outsiders", but has no effect on my neighbor's
ability, if she were so inclined, to snoop on my
traffic. Correct so far? It is almost silly to consider her a
threat from
what I know of her, but I'm a paranoid kind of guy, ya know? Advice, comments, and money (especially money!) always appreciated! - Dan
-- ----------------------------- Booth Martin www.martinvt.com ----------------------------- -- This is the PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users (PcTech) mailing list To post a message email: PcTech@xxxxxxxxxxxx To subscribe, unsubscribe, or change list options, visit: http://lists.midrange.com/mailman/listinfo/pctech or email: PcTech-request@xxxxxxxxxxxx Before posting, please take a moment to review the archives at http://archive.midrange.com/pctech. This email is for the use of the intended recipient(s) only. If you have received this email in error, please notify the sender immediately and then delete it. If you are not the intended recipient, you must not keep, use, disclose, copy or distribute this email without the author's prior permission. We have taken precautions to minimize the risk of transmitting software viruses, but we advise you to carry out your own virus checks on any attachment to this message. We cannot accept liability for any loss or damage caused by software viruses. The information contained in this communication may be confidential and may be subject to the attorney-client privilege. If you are the intended recipient and you do not wish to receive similar electronic messages from us in future then please respond to the sender to this effect.
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