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Showing posts with the label Wired troubleshooting

Not Sniffing, but... LinkSprinter 300

Eleven months ago, I wrote about Fluke Networks' Ethernet testing tool, the LinkSprinter .  Now there's a new model, the LinkSprinter 300 , and Fluke was nice enough to send me one to test.   LinkSprinter 300 is basically the same as the LinkSprinter 200, except it costs an extra $100 and it has two extra features: one cool and one that I haven't tested. I really, really hate it when people say "read this" in the middle of a discussion.  It is sauce of the weakest variety.  Just frickin' summarize it.  People tend to give me the ol' "read this" either when discussing a topic that they've written about or in an attempt to cite evidence.  In both cases, a summary will do.  If you are discussing Wi-Fi sniffing with me on Twitter and you wrote a white paper saying that Wireshark is the bee's knees, then tell me why on Twitter.  If you believe that it wasn't a fact that the Earth is round until Greek philosophers proved it a few th...

Not Sniffing, but... Fluke Networks LinkSprinter

It's time to switch things up a bit.  WiFi sniffing is a fascinating topic and all, but good ol' Yours Truly wants to try something new.   This will be the first in the "Not Sniffing, but..." series on the Sniff WiFi blog.  I come across interesting topics outside of sniffing all the time, so I want to add short blog posts on some of these topics. Several months ago WLAN bon vivant Keith Parsons  posted a blurb on his WLANPros.com blog about the Fluke Networks LinkSprinter .  I contacted someone from Fluke Networks to ask about the LinkSprinter, and they were gracious enough to send me one to test. LinkSprinter is a wired testing tool.  It's more for people who install APs than for people who, like me, primarily do frame captures.  Still, we both do troubleshooting.  The LinkSprinter is definitely for troubleshooting. The tool is pretty simple.  You plug in an Ethernet cable, and you pre...