On Friday 06 December 2019 09:33:18 R C wrote:
> He's not "cracking" your key, he is just getting access to your
> router.
>
> What router is it? Some of these "residential" routers, when you
> change your admin password, the old default one still exists.
>
Not with dd-wrt.
> Also, if you
On Friday 06 December 2019 05:45:24 Gregg Eshelman via Emc-users wrote:
> Must be some exploit in the WiFi router you have. If you're using the
> WiFi built into the modem from your ISP,
Nope, no wifi in their modem. It faces a buffalo netfinity that been
reflashed to dd-wrt, and it then feeds
He's not "cracking" your key, he is just getting access to your router.
What router is it? Some of these "residential" routers, when you
change your admin password, the old default one still exists.
Also, if you access your router over wifi itself, you'd be at risk. If
you're using HTTPS, you'd
Must be some exploit in the WiFi router you have. If you're using the WiFi
built into the modem from your ISP, ask them if there is a firmware update they
can install or if they have a newer model.If not, then get a new WiFi router
with up to date security and daisy chain it off your LAN.
On Thursday 05 December 2019 17:26:46 Dave Matthews wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 5, 2019 at 4:17 PM Gene Heskett
wrote:
> > On Thursday 05 December 2019 15:01:25 Bruce Layne wrote:
> > > I'd use a USB WiFi dongle for the software upgrades or any other
> > > internet access, and use the ethernet port to
sourceforge.net
> > Subject: Re: [Emc-users] parallel port picie cards
> >
> > On Thursday 05 December 2019 15:01:25 Bruce Layne wrote:
> >> I'd use a USB WiFi dongle for the software upgrades or any other
> >> internet access, and use the ethernet port to control
On Thu, Dec 5, 2019 at 4:17 PM Gene Heskett wrote:
>
> On Thursday 05 December 2019 15:01:25 Bruce Layne wrote:
>
> > I'd use a USB WiFi dongle for the software upgrades or any other
> > internet access, and use the ethernet port to control the 7i96.
> >
> That would work, except I've a neighbor
On Thu, 5 Dec 2019, Gene Heskett wrote:
Date: Thu, 5 Dec 2019 16:14:57 -0500
From: Gene Heskett
Reply-To: "Enhanced Machine Controller (EMC)"
To: emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net
Subject: Re: [Emc-users] parallel port picie cards
On Thursday 05 December 2019 15:01:25 Bruce L
On Thursday 05 December 2019 15:01:25 Bruce Layne wrote:
> I'd use a USB WiFi dongle for the software upgrades or any other
> internet access, and use the ethernet port to control the 7i96.
>
That would work, except I've a neighbor that bought some sort of a
cracker for his phone that can deduce
I'd use a USB WiFi dongle for the software upgrades or any other
internet access, and use the ethernet port to control the 7i96.
If you don't want your CNC machine on the internet most of the time,
pull the WiFi dongle. I use my phone as the hotspot for my WiFi
connected CNC machines. It's very
On Thursday 05 December 2019 06:05:12 Marius Alksnys wrote:
> Don't forget the simplest and most economic all-in-one solution like
> Mesa 7i96
> https://mesaus.com/product-category/ethernet-cards/
>
At $120, the last 45 being the ethernet socket, its still more than a
5i25 and a SainSmart Bob.
Don't forget the simplest and most economic all-in-one solution like
Mesa 7i96
https://mesaus.com/product-category/ethernet-cards/
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On Wed, 4 Dec 2019 at 03:21, R C wrote:
> what would be a good PCIe card t use with linux-cnc, would any card
> that does ECP/EPP do?
You might want to look at the Mesa 6i25. It's not a parallel card, but
it can behave like one.
The onboard FPGA can generate step pulses and count encoders at
On Wednesday 04 December 2019 03:25:20 Chris Albertson wrote:
> Mesa FPGA cards are so cheap now are parallel port cards worth it?
> Dramatically better performance for not much difference in cost
>
I'd argue about the diff in cost. A 5i25 is still about $60 more
expensive than an EPP parport,
Mesa FPGA cards are so cheap now are parallel port cards worth it?
Dramatically better performance for not much difference in cost
On Tue, Dec 3, 2019 at 7:21 PM R C wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
>
> what would be a good PCIe card t use with linux-cnc, would any card
> that does ECP/EPP do?
>
>
> thanks,
On Tuesday 03 December 2019 22:19:21 R C wrote:
> Hello,
>
>
> what would be a good PCIe card t use with linux-cnc, would any card
> that does ECP/EPP do?
I had good luck with a startech card a decade or so back but eventually
bought an ARK with a D525MW mobo in it, worked even better. But
thanks!!
from the answers I get is that pretty much anything from a renomated
brand, that supports EPP/ECP would work.
Ron
On 12/3/19 9:57 PM, Jon Elson wrote:
On 12/03/2019 09:19 PM, R C wrote:
Hello,
what would be a good PCIe card t use with linux-cnc, would any card
that does
On 12/03/2019 09:19 PM, R C wrote:
Hello,
what would be a good PCIe card t use with linux-cnc,
would any card that does ECP/EPP do?
I use Syba PEX10005 cards with my FPGA controller boards,
they seem to work well with a wide
variety of motherboards. They are also relatively cheap.
Jon
ok, sounds right.
I (for now) want to get two paxton/patterson machines (mill and lathe)
going again. hey would need some special cabling, but figured that out
a long while ago.
Once i have that going again, I want to use a better controller/driver,
then the ones built in.
(I can
I have been using these:
http://wiki.linuxcnc.org/cgi-bin/wiki.pl?WCH
You only need fully EPP compliant if you are connecting it to an FPGA
like Mesa.
On 12/3/19 9:19 PM, R C wrote:
> Hello,
>
>
> what would be a good PCIe card t use with linux-cnc, would any card
> that does ECP/EPP do?
>
>
>
Hello,
what would be a good PCIe card t use with linux-cnc, would any card
that does ECP/EPP do?
thanks,
Ron
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