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Asus AAM6000EV ADSL Modem Owners ManualFeatures Software Upgrade 2. Preparations System Update Procedure System Requirements Appendix A: Product Certifications Installing a Network Card . FCC Installing the TCP/IP Protocol UL 2.4 Changing TCP/IP Settings CE 3. Installing the ADSL Modem Appendix B: Product Specifications Front Panel ADSL Specifications Rear Panel ATM Specifications Connecting the ADSL Modem Basic Protocol and RFC Powering Up Routing Function Hardware Specification Configuring the ADSL Modem COM Port Configuration Appendix C: ADSL Acronyms Operation Mode Configuration MPoA/Bridged MPoA/Routed IPoA PPPoA/Bridged PPPoA/Routed PPPoE PPPoE Relay
This ADSL modem delivers Overview the highest performance in Asymetric Digital Subscriber Line technology, allowing you to simultaneously enjoy the telephone and Internet service using existing copper phone lines. Ideal for home and small business users, this easy-to-use communication device offers reliable connectivity as well as remarkable data transfer rates–up to 8Mbps downstream and 640Kbps upstream. Once the ADSL Modem is powered up, you are always online to enjoy real-time 3D animation, video conferencing, or perform other data intensive operations.
Download pdf Asus AAM6000EV ADSL Modem Owners ManualForensic Analysis of Microsoft Internet Explorer Cookie FilesSince HTTP is a stateless protocol, websites must place information on a user’s computer if it needs to save information about a web session. For instance, when a user selects a widget and adds it to his shopping cart, that information can be saved on the client computer rather than the web server. The facility to save information in this manner is known as Cookies. A cookie is a small file containing data that the web server places on a user’s computer so it may request back at a later date.
During forensic analysis it is often relevant to parse the information in Internet Explorer’s cookie files into a human readable format. Cookies aid forensic analysts during the investigation by providing insight to a suspect’s internet activity. After analysis of several example cookie files it was found that the format is relatively simple to understand. This paper will document the format of Internet Explorer’s (IE) cookie files for forensic analysis purposes and provide an open source tool to parse the information into a human readable format.
Download pdf Forensic Analysis of Microsoft Internet Explorer Cookie FilesMaya Plugins for RealFlowHere is an explanation of how to work with RealFlow and Maya with the collection of plug-ins provided with RealFlow pack. The RealFlow plug-ins for Maya consist of the following files: RealflowMesher.mll (or RealflowMesher.so for Maya Linux) RealflowMesher.mel sdTranslator.mll (or sdTranslator.so for Maya Linux) sdTranslatorOpts.mel RealflowParticler.mll (or RealflowParticler.so for Maya Linux) RealflowParticler.mel ERealflowEmitterTemplate.mel rf2.bmp (or rf2.xpm for Maya Linux) rflogo.bmp (or rflogo.xpm for Maya Linux) cubos.bmp (or cubos.xpm for Maya Linux) Send Plug-in questions to maya@nextlimit.com Installation
Download pdf Maya Plugins for RealFlowCreating HTML Files with Microsoft Word 2000HTML is the file format that is most compatible within WebCT, as well as the World Wide Web in general. You can use Microsoft Word to simply and swiftly create your own HTML files, with or without images.
Preparing Your Word Document for Web Publishing
Before you convert your Microsoft Word document into an HTML file for online presentation, you must make sure that the document is exactly the way you want it to look: you must proofread your text for errors, set the title of the document, and insert images you would like to use. As you complete each step, you should save your document to avoid losing your work. Every web page should have a title, which will appear in the title bar of the web browser when the document is being viewed.
To set the title of your document:
1. On the toolbar at the top of the window, go to File > Properties. You may have to click on the double arrows at the bottom of the File drop-down menu to expand the menu and see the Properties option.
2. Click on Properties. The file Properties dialog box will appear.
3. Choose the Summary tab.
4. In the Title area of the Summary tab, type in the title of your presentation.
5. Click OK.
You can enhance your presentation by adding images that are relevant to the information you are presenting; in some cases, images may be an essential part.
Download pdf Creating HTML Files with Microsoft Word 2000Linux Man Page HowtoWhy do we write documentation? Silly question. Because we want others to be able to use our program, library function or whatever we have written and made available. But writing documentation is not all there is to it: Documentation must be accessible. If it's hidden in some non?standard place where the documentation?related tools won't find it ?? how can it serve its purpose?
• Documentation must be reliable and accurate. There's nothing more annoying than having program behaviour and documentation disagree. Users will curse you, send you hate mail and throw your work into the bit bucket, with the firm intent to never install anything written by that jerk again.
• The historical and well known way documentation is accessed on UNIX is via the man(1) command. This HOWTO describes what you have to do to write a man page that will be correctly processed by the documentation? related tools. The most important of these tools are man(1), xman(1x), apropos(1), makewhatis(8) and catman(8). Reliability and accuracy of the information are, of course, up to you. But even in this respect you will find some ideas below that help you avoid some common glitches.
How are man pages accessed?
You need to know the precise mechanism for acccessing man pages in order to give your man page the right name and install it in the right place. Each man page should be categorized in a specific section, denoted by a single character. The most common sections under Linux, and their human readable names, are:
Section TheiGroove SXT Owner’s ManualThe iGroove SXT is designed to allow you to share the contents of your iPod with the world around you. The iGroove SXT is a true two-way, stereo sound system incorporating two long-throw 2.5’’ (6.4cm) woofers in a ported enclosure and two horn-loaded tweeters. This systemprovides the accuracy, detail and output that will bring your music to life as only Klipsch can. Unpack the Box Unpack the entire contents of the shipping box and make sure you have the following items.
Now you are ready to dock your iPod. While your iPod is docked, its battery is charging (until it is fully charged). System Operation The DockYour iGroove SXT system is ready to perform as soon as you plugit in and dock an iPod. The Power button located on the top right of the iGroove SXT will light up “Red” in “Standby/Off” mode and “Blue” in “On” mode. The volume up and down buttons are located to the left of the Power button on the top right of the iGroove SXT.
Download pdf iGroove SXT Owner’s ManualInstalling Ubuntu Linux “Feisty Fawn” Server Version 7.04 ScreenshotWe want you to install Ubuntu and set up the network manually entering in your fixed IP address, your correct host name and domain. In addition we will manually partition your file system. We will still create the same file system as you would get with an automated install, but in the real world you may need to understand how to create your own file system layout. After the Initial Install We will install the Ubuntu Desktop meta package (Gnome 2.18 and Xorg) as well as properly configure this to work with your particular hardware by installing the xserverxorgvideo intel package.
Before we do this we’ll do a number of other exercises as well. You will specify a user name and password of your choosing. One of the exercises will include creating a user named “admin” and a password we’ll specify in class. If you have questions during installation ask your instructor or an assistant. Installing Ubuntu Step 7 If you can press “Cancel” in time please do so, otherwise see the screen in Step 8 and choose to “Go Back” to manually configure your network. Step 14 The hostname is what you should have on your first page of this installation guide. And, remember to use lowercase characters. Step 16 Your machines likely already have partitions on them. If this is the case you need to delete each individual partition first, then you can create partitions. Here is a sample of deletingWhy .NET Technology is Important for ERPIn the late 1990’s many ERP companies caught the web browser wave, undertaking projects to leverage the Internet and browser technology and even to convert their software to “lite-client” or web “portal” architectures. Unfortunately for some, .NET came on the scene too soon after this major overhaul. When .NET appeared, some were too technically exhausted, or inflexible, or still basking in the glow of their new “Internet-based architectures” to recognize and embrace .NET. Other ERP software companies were and continue to be simply too busy struggling to stay solvent during the devastating one-two-three punch of Y2K, the recession of 2000, and 9/11. They lack the resources to consider the complete restructuring of their products that .NET warrants.
While Microsoft struggles to explain and market .NET, the changes at its core represent the biggest shift in software technology since the dawn of Microsoft Windows. .NET is the second shoe to fall in the Internet revolution, portending a whole new computing model emphasizing not just superficial trading of web pages, but cooperating and collaborating systems. For ERP vendors and their customers, .NET spells the future of enterprise software applications. And, as we will explore in this whitepaper, .NET technology points to a future that demands ERP software companies rethink and rewrite their base architectures.
The Right Place, the Right Time: Accepting the Challenge
In 1998, Intuitive Manufacturing Systems was a 4-year-old ERP company, following the industry leaders, investigating “lite-client” architectures and tools to move their ERP package into the Internet age. Intuitive’s investigation turned upGridConnect Wi232/WiUSB Serial to Wireless Ethernet Adapter User ManualOverview Additional Documentation Application Examples Protocol Support Serial RS232 Interface -USB Interface Power Supply Ethernet Interface LEDs Product CD Technical Specifications Quick Start Required Information Hardware Address IP Address WLAN Settings Installing and Configuring the Wi232 Making a Wireless Connection Configuration Using Web-Manager Network Configuration Automatic IP Address Configuration Static IP Address Configuration Server Configuration Serial Tunnel Hostlist Configuration Channel 1
Configuration Serial Settings Connection Settings - TCP Connection Settings - UDP Email ConfigurationWLAN Configuration Configurable Pins Apply Settings Apply Factory Defaults Configuration via Serial Mode or Telnet Port Server Configuration Channel 1 Configuration Baudrate I/F (Interface) Mode Flow Port Number Connect Mode Wi232/WiUSB User Guide Auto Increment Source Port Remote IP Address Remote Port DisConnMode Flush Mode DisConnTime (Inactivity Timeout) SendChar 1 and SendChar2 Telnet Terminal Type Channel (Port) Password E-mail WLAN Settings Enable WLAN Find Network Name (SSID) Enable Ad Hoc Network Creation Security Data Rate Enable Power Management Expert Settings TCP Keepalive Time ARP Cache Timeout High Performance mode Disable Monitor Mode HTTP Port Number SMTP Port Number Security Settings Disable SNMP SNMP Community Name Disable Telnet Setup Disable TFTP Firmware Upgrade Disable Port 77FE (Hex) Disable Web Server Disable Web Setup Disable ECHO Ports Enable Enhanced Password Disable Port 77F0h Factory Defaults Exit Configuration Mode Monitoring the Network Entering Monitor Mode via the Serial Port Entering Monitor Mode via the Network Port Monitor Mode Commands Updating Firmware Troubleshooting Problems and Error Messages Binary to Hex Conversion Conversion Table Scientific Calculator Conformity Wi232/WiUSB User GuideInternet Programming with DelphiBorland Delphi is known to be a great environment for the development of stand-alone and client-server applications on the Microsoft Windows platform. Its virtues range from full OOP support to visual development, in a unique combination of power and ease. However, the new frontier of development is now Internet programming. What has Delphi got to offer in this new context? Which are the features you can rely upon to build great Internet applications with Delphi? That’s what this paper intends to reveal. We’ll see that Delphi can be used:
• For direct socket and TCP/IP programming;
• In conjunction with third-party components that implement the most common Internet protocols, on the client or the server side;
• To produce HTML pages on the server side, with the WebBroker and Internet Express architectures;
• As well as to work with Microsoft’s core technologies, including MTS, COM, ASP, and ActiveX.
The Challenges of Internet Programming
Internet programming poses new challenges to traditional developer environments and to the programmers using them. There are issues related with the implementation of standard protocols, the use of multiple platforms (Microsoft Windows accounts for most of the client computers on the Internet but only a fraction of the servers), and the licensing schemes of some RDBMS systems.
Most of the problems, however, relate with HTTP development:
Turning existing Windows applications into applications running within a Web browser is more complex than it might seem at first sight. The Web is stateless, the development of user interfaces can be quite an issue, and you invariably have