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You could change the key on the access point. That will require you to change it on all the laptops, too. There probably is some way to recover the key from another laptop. I don't know how to do that, though. Zac
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Have you tried changing the location of the access point in your house? If it is located near a large metal object that could interfere with radio wave propagation. You can test for signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) using Netstumbler , which should give you some idea about whether interference is a problem. When you say you've tried switching channels
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First try restarting both the access point and your computer. Then I would suggest turning off encryption to see if that is the problem. You might also try changing the channel on the acces point. Reinstalling the network card driver is always an option. HTH, Zac
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The problem with mail delivery sounds like a problem in the recipient policies. Has that been set up correctly? I'm afraid I can't help with the OWA problem. You might try the Microsoft Newsgroups . Zac
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Thanks for the heads-up. The site works for me in Mozilla 1.7 -- I haven't tried to reproduce the error in FireFox. I have passed your bug report on to our techs. Zac Mutrux
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Two comments here: 1) The worm doesn't really do much harm. Because of the severity of the flaw in Windows, the virus writer could have instructed the worm to do anything to the computers it infects, including complete erasure of the hard drives. But instead, all it does is make copies of itself and DDoS the Windows Update server. This worm will
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I like Debian because it has a thoroughly documented bug database and a useful package management tool (apt-get). zm
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You can safely ignore this message. It is not always possible to obtain a Windows Certified driver. If you are cautious you will make a backup before installing the new driver. You could create a system restore point in Windows XP, too. Look in Start | Programs | Accessories | System Tools | System Restore. Yours, Zac
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Is your NT box patched to the current level? Have you searched the Microsoft KB and Google Groups for help? That is where I would start. Zac
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Boot and Nuke uses a linux distro compiled for the x86 processor. It will only work in PCs. In order for it to run on a Mac it would have to be compiled for the PPC processor. To securely wipe a Mac drive, try this: http://www.securemac.com/eraser.php If you are running Mac OS X, you might be able to write random numbers to the disk from the command