D-Link DCS-1000 Product Manual - Page 21

HEX input format, Encryption WEP Key

Page 21 highlights

Encryption WEP Key: (for Wireless Internet Camera only) Wireless network communications are easily intercepted. WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) is an encryption method specified by the IEEE 802.11b standard to make any intercepted communications extremely difficult to interpret by unauthorized parties. To enable WEP Encryption, first decide which WEP key format will be applied. Click on ASCII or HEX check box to select input format as ASCII format or HEX format, and then input the WEP key. To Confirm the WEP key you must enter the data once again in the Confirm WEP Key field. ASCII input format: (for Wireless Internet Camera only) ASCII format causes each character you type to be interpreted as an eight-bit value. All unaccented upper- and lower-case Western European characters that can be input through your keyboard's typing zone are valid. To setup 64-bit WEP key, input 5 ASCII characters, for example, '12345'. To setup 128-bit WEP key, input 13 ASCII characters, for example, '1234567890123'. These character counts result in bit counts of 40 and 104, respectively; the Internet Camera will automatically pad your input to a bit count of 64 or 128. HEX input format: (for Wireless Internet Camera only) Hex format causes each pair of characters you type to be interpreted as an eight-bit value in hexadecimal (base 16) notation. Only the digits 0 through 9 and the letters A through F (in upper or lower case) are valid. To setup 64-bit WEP key, input 10 HEX format, for example, '3132333435', this is the same with ASCII input '12345'. To setup 128-bit WEP key, input 26 HEX format, for example, '31323334353637383930313233', this is the same with ASCII input '1234567890123'. These character counts result in bit counts of 40 and 104, respectively; the Internet Camera will automatically pad your input to a bit count of 64 or 128. On the Confirm WEP Key field, input the same characters as the Encryption Code field. Make sure the Encryption Code is the same with the access point's encryption code that the Internet Camera is to be connected under Infrastructure mode. Your PC/ Notebook's encryption code also needs to be setup the same with the Internet Camera's encryption code under either Infrastructure mode or Ad-hoc mode. 21

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21
HEX input format:
(for Wireless Internet Camera only)
Hex format causes each pair of characters you type to be interpreted as an eight-bit
value in hexadecimal (base 16) notation. Only the digits 0 through 9 and the letters A
through F (in upper or lower case) are valid. To setup 64-bit WEP key, input 10 HEX
format, for example, ‘3132333435’, this is the same with ASCII input ‘12345’. To setup
128-bit WEP key, input 26 HEX format, for example, ‘31323334353637383930313233’,
this is the same with ASCII input ‘1234567890123’. These character counts result in
bit counts of 40 and 104, respectively; the Internet Camera will automatically pad your
input to a bit count of 64 or 128.
On the Confirm WEP Key field, input the same characters as the Encryption Code
field.
Make sure the Encryption Code is the same with the access point’s encryption code
that the Internet Camera is to be connected under Infrastructure mode. Your PC/
Notebook’s encryption code also needs to be setup the same with the Internet Camera’s
encryption code under either Infrastructure mode or Ad-hoc mode.
Encryption WEP Key:
(for Wireless Internet Camera only)
Wireless network communications are easily intercepted. WEP (Wired Equivalent
Privacy) is an encryption method specified by the IEEE 802.11b standard to make any
intercepted communications extremely difficult to interpret by unauthorized parties.
To enable WEP Encryption, first decide which WEP key format will be applied. Click
on ASCII or HEX check box to select input format as ASCII format or HEX format, and
then input the WEP key. To Confirm the WEP key you must enter the data once again
in the Confirm WEP Key field.
ASCII input format:
(for Wireless Internet Camera only)
ASCII format causes each character you type to be interpreted as an eight-bit value.
All unaccented upper- and lower-case Western European characters that can be input
through your keyboard’s typing zone are valid. To setup 64-bit WEP key, input 5 ASCII
characters, for example, ‘12345’. To setup 128-bit WEP key, input 13 ASCII characters,
for example, ‘1234567890123’. These character counts result in bit counts of 40 and
104, respectively; the Internet Camera will automatically pad your input to a bit count of
64 or 128.