Forum › Forums › Freeview HD › HDR FOX T2 › Configuring WiFi
Tagged: dongle, HDR-FOX T2, WiFi
- This topic has 27 replies, 11 voices, and was last updated 14 years, 3 months ago by
Anonymous.
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July 7, 2011 at 4:18 pm #27111
Barry
ModeratorHave only seen this message once on the HD unit connecting via WiFi, and that was with pressing the Portal button immediately after boot up – left it a few seconds longer to connect to network and all was OK.
July 7, 2011 at 7:31 pm #27112Anonymous
InactiveTrevor Wright – 4 hours ago »
One small further query.
If you’ve started up the HDR from cold and press “TV Portal” it says the network is not active. So you go down to settings, into the page with your carefully crafted WiFi settings and hit “Apply”. TV Portal is then happy.
Maybe it will be fixed in the fullness of time but should TV Portal activate a non-active network on your behalf, or should there be a simple “Connect Network Yes/No” toggle somewhere.
Or am I missing something…?
My WiFi does not broadcast its SSID and I can confirm that you have to do an “Apply” to connect every time you start the HDR. If the SSID is being broadcast then the HDR will automatically reconnect on startup.
Not sure if this is a bug or a feature?
July 9, 2011 at 7:29 am #27113Anonymous
Inactivegjw – 1 day ago »
My WiFi does not broadcast its SSID and I can confirm that you have to do an “Apply” to connect every time you start the HDR. If the SSID is being broadcast then the HDR will automatically reconnect on startup.
Not sure if this is a bug or a feature?
Yes, my SSID is also not broadcast hence the non-automatic connection. I’d say it therefore needs a toggle option inside the Configuring WiFi page for “Automatic Connection Yes/No”. Maybe Barry can pass this on to Humax. Thanks
July 9, 2011 at 6:07 pm #27114Anonymous
InactiveOf course there is absolutely no reason to have your wi-fi network not broadcast its SSID apart from giving you a false sense of security and cause unnecessary problems for you.
July 10, 2011 at 6:59 am #27115Anonymous
InactiveIf you want another level of security most routers let you also restrict access by mac address.
July 10, 2011 at 9:52 am #27116Anonymous
InactiveRestricting by MAC address is security level 0 or if you want to be kind level 0.1.
July 10, 2011 at 2:26 pm #27117Anonymous
InactiveI did say another (meaning additional) level.
July 11, 2011 at 7:41 am #27118Anonymous
Inactivegomezz – 1 day ago »
Of course there is absolutely no reason to have your wi-fi network not broadcast its SSID apart from giving you a false sense of security and cause unnecessary problems for you.
Well, not broadcasting the SSID; using a maximum length SSID and Password keys, and requiring the MAC address to be preloaded into the router are all suggestions the router manufacturers make to ensure maximum security. Yes, it can be a bit of a bother but seems sensible.
July 11, 2011 at 9:43 am #27119Anonymous
InactiveSigh! As long as you have encryption turned on (preferably WPA as WEP is easily defeated) with a strong key then the rest adds absolutely nothing. Both the SSID and an allowed MAC address can be easily detected and spoofed even if you have it set not to broadcast the SSID. In fact the SSID is still present in the transmissions in the clear. Hiding it is like taking the number off your house which is not going to stop the burglar. But hiding it is like stopping the delivery man turning up with that parcel you have been eagerly waiting for all day.
July 11, 2011 at 7:16 pm #27120Anonymous
InactiveA little off subject but my ISP’s new ADSL router (and seperate media box) opens up WI-FI sharing to other roaming customers. By default your Wi-Fi has all the usual settings but can also be accessed by passers by who are customers with the same ISP using ISP given settings on the laptop having also haing dowloaded and installed a cetificate issued and linked to them. They need to know nothing about your Wi-Fi settings. Now here is the interesting bit – when they connect to your Wi-Fi network they cannot see or connect to other hosts – in fact they are using a routable IP trackable to them, not to you. If you choose to disable this function then your roaming access is also disabled. This model box is only issued to clients at unbundled exchanges.
Would be most interested in how this is done – my exchanged is due to be unbundled last this year, when I get the new box I will have fun trying to find out.
July 12, 2011 at 10:22 am #27121Anonymous
InactiveAfraid I have to agree that a hidden SSID doesn’t add much and that even MAC restriction is excessive for the reasons gomezz states.
The important thing is that no one actually cares about hacking networks that have a decent password and encryption. Frankly it is highly likely that no one actually cares about hacking your data. People do like to get access to free wifi, if you were interested in gaining access to peoples data you would probably just drive around looking for open or WEP networks.
Chances are your firewall/router is less secure in itself than the wifi.
August 11, 2011 at 2:59 pm #27122Anonymous
InactiveHi, please excuse my ignorance but I am not at all technically minded.
I have just added the wi fi dongle to my HDR Fox T2. I could not get it to connect to my password protected BT infinity service but it does connect to the BTzone open service (none password) with confirmation of 52 mps download.
When I click on ‘TV Portal’ it says ‘connecting’ then, after a few moments, I get an error message and the HDR freezes causing me to switch off and on again before it will respond again.
I have updated the software to the latest 01.02.20 version and even re-set the HDR to factory settings to no avail.
Any advice please? The manual is useless on this and it’s 2 weeks since I emailed Humax.
August 12, 2011 at 3:29 pm #27123Anonymous
InactiveSorted now. All I had to do was re-boot!
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