Most Popular Articles
- Send SMS for Free via AIM on iPhone (13 Jul 2008)
- How to Protect Yourself from the New Mac OS X Trojans (25 Jun 2008)
- Firefox 3 Bounds Forward (22 Jun 2008)
- First Impressions of the iPhone 3G and iPhone 2.0 (14 Jul 2008)
Recent TidBITS Talk Discussions
- Firefox feature sought (23 messages)
- iPhone 3G car accessories (1 message)
- iPhone 3G: On the Line in Seattle (3 messages)
- Hands Off iPhone Talking in my Car (8 messages)
Shopping for a new digital camera? In "Take Control of Buying a Digital Camera," pro photographer Larry Chen helps you pick out the right camera and accessories for your needs and budget. This book is loaded with tips on using your camera, pointers to the best review sites, and more!
Published in TidBITS 846. Subscribe today to receive TidBITS in email every Monday.
- OmniWeb 5.5 Goes Universal, Switches to WebKit
- Interarchy 8.2 Adds Growl Support and More
- C4 Developer Conference Promises a Taste of MacHack
- Parallels Desktop Updated for Mac Pro and Leopard
- iMac Line Adds Core 2 Duo Chip, 24-inch Model
- BBEdit 8.5 Adds Function via Form
- Behind the TidBITS Curtain
- Take Control News/11-Sep-06
- Hot Topics in TidBITS Talk/11-Sep-06
coconutWiFi Reveals Nearby Networks, Status
Wi-Fi networks are everywhere, but finding them often requires tedious use of the erratic AirPort menu in the menu bar, or a separately running application, like iStumbler, that shows more information than most people require. (iStumbler is great for learning more about and troubleshooting the local AirPort-space, however, and includes support for scanning for Bluetooth devices and revealing Bonjour services on the local network.)
Christoph Sinai's coconutWiFi offers a simple menu bar indicator: a single dot. The dot is red when there are no networks in the vicinity, yellow when nearby networks are encrypted with WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) or WPA (Wi-Fi Protected Access) protection, and green if at least one unprotected network is in range. (Scanning isn't sufficient to find other protection methods, such as WPA Enterprise, which requires a login, or MAC (Media Access Control) lockouts, with which specific Wi-Fi adapters are allowed access by their unique hardware number.)
Click the dot, and a list of networks drops down, including the method of encryption for protected networks. An optional number next to the indicator displays the number of networks found. The software is a universal binary and a 219K download; donations are accepted.
READERS LIKE YOU! Support TidBITS with a contribution today!<http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/contributors.html>
Special thanks this week to Alfred R. Ford, Emko Witteveen,
Tatsuo Iwata, and Robert G. Dalsemer for their generous support!






