AirLive AP60 User Manual

Page 43

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4. Wireless Settings





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AirLive AP60 User’s Manual

Key Format: 2 types are available: ASCII and HEX. ASCII is a string of ASCII
code including alphabetical characters, space, signs and numbers (i.e.

“airlivepass12”). HEX is a string of 16-bit hexadecimal digits (0..9, a, b, c, d, e, f).
All wireless devices on the network must match the exact key length and Key type.

Some Wireless clients only allow HEX type for WEP.

ASCII-64: This is a key with 64-bit key length of ASCII type. Please enter 5
ASCII Characters if you choose this option. For example, “passw”

HEX-64: This is a key with 64-bit key length of HEX type. Please enter 10
Hexadecimal digits if you choose this option. For example, “12345abcdef”

ASCII-128: This is a key with 64-bit key length of ASCII type. Please enter 13
ASCII Characters if you choose this option. For example, “airlivewepkey”

HEX-128: This is a key with 128-bit key length of HEX type. Please enter 26
Hexadecimal digits if you choose this option. For example,

“1234567890abcdef1234567890”

WPA-Personal, WPA2-Personal, WPA-Mixed

The WPA Personal is also known as “WPA-PSK” encryption. Wi-Fi Protected Access

(WPA) introduces the Temporal Key Integrity Protocol (TKIP) that provides added
security. WPA2 adds full support for 802.11i standard and the CCMP (AES Encryption).

The WPA-Mixed tries to authenticate wireless clients using both WPA-PSK or

WPA2-PSK.

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