Kismet and IPW2200 on Fedora Core 4

Some time ago, I replaced my old IBM Thinkpad with a Dell notebook that has an Intel IPW2200 wireless network card inside. With that, I lost the ability to monitor wireless networks with Kismet.

But as Patrick Olsen describes in "ipw2200 driver install on Fedora Core 4", the latest versions of the IPW2200 driver and Kismet work together just fine. Installation is even easier than described by Patrick - you do not need the kernel source. The only thing to look out for is to first remove old versions of ieee80211 and ipw2200 with the remove-old script from each package, and then compile and install ieee80211 and ipw2200 in that order. Also, the current version of ieee80211 has trouble deleting two directories in /lib/modules, so I manually moved include/config/ieee80211 and drivers/net/wireless/ieee80211 about which it complained out of the way.

On my Dell D800, the source setting for Kismet is ipw2200,dev30359,ipw2200, where dev30359 is the same interface name displayed by iwconfig.

23:40, 10 Aug 2005 by Carsten Clasohm Permalink | Comments (0)

Wikimania 2005 [wikimania2005.wikimedia.org]

I spent the last weekend at the Wikimania 2005 in Frankfurt, the first international Wikipedia conference.

One hot topic at Wikipedia is geographic information and creation of digital maps. After attending Arnulf Christi's presentation on Open Geo Data Projects, my Google Maps enthusiasm has cooled off a bit. Google decided to create their own API instead of following an existing standard. On the other hand, Google Maps just works too well to not use it for my hiking maps.

The second geo-related workshop I attended was done by Tobias Dahinden, and covered the graphical design of maps. From what I learned, map design is hard, and science has not made much progress in automatic map drawing in the last 30 years. And things get worse when it comes to displaying maps on a computer screen. The most devastating examples were side-by-side pictures of MapQuest and manually drawn maps. Another topic of this workshop was how to get the geographic coordinates for drawing maps. Unfortunately, only the USA makes data freely available when it has been created with tax money. Over here in Germany, geographic information is sold by the states, and may not be redistributed.

09:58, 09 Aug 2005 by Carsten Clasohm Permalink | Comments (0)

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