How do locate my WEP Key to link wirelessly to my HP Photosmart Printer?

My Photosmart Plus printer pad is asking me for my WEP Key so it will link up to the computers in my home, including my iMac. How do I locate the WEP Key?.... I have a Linksys Wireless G Router.

You need to access the admin area of the router. From a browser type 192.168.1.1 in the address bar and hit return. That should bring up a prompt where you need to insert a user name and password to access your router's admin area. Hopefully you set up a password here and did not forget it. If not just put in 'admin' as the password. Then navigate to the wireless security page and you will see the info you want that you forgot, if indeed you set up a WEP key.
Alternatively you could read the manual for your router.

Similar Messages

  • How do i find WEP key for wrt54g

    Hi, my husband set up our system and i am trying to add a new wireless printer. He is out of the country for business, hence my problem. How do i find what the WEP key/ network key is? Thank you for your help.

    If you have other computer which had connected to this wireless network before, probably you can also use this wireless key finder on that computer to locate the WEP encryption key.
    Hope this helps.

  • How to view my WEP Key ?

    I need to connect to my Airport Extreme Wireless Network from a WIndow XP configured Macbook.
    WIndows requires the Hexadecimal WEP key to connect.
    How do i get this?
    To be sure, i have read many similar questions on this forum and tried :
    - The network preference panel. The "show password" tick option remains grayed out.
    - The Airport utility. The "equivalent network password" on the Base Station meny remains grayed out.
    - The Keychain access utility. I can only find the alphabetic passord, not the hexadecimal WEP key (of course tried to enter the alphabetic one, but did not work, so i assume it is expecting the hexadecimal one....).
    - In one of the posts, the contributor is bemoaning about an upgrade on snow leopard that makes getting to view the WEP key absurdly complicated. He provides a link :
    http://www.adamriggins.com/2009/11/16/how-to-view-saved-wifi-passwords-in-osx-sn ow-leopard/
    ... which unfortunately is not working anymore...
    I do clearly remember easily retrieving the WEP key 2 or 3 years ago, maybe from OS leopard at the time. I don't quite understand why it's been made so difficult now. Was there a security issue ? then is there an Apple note summarizing those facts and recommanding steps for previously set networks ?
    Anyone who can help on this is very welcome.
    Thanks in advance
    YM

    well first of all why are you using wep? don't you realize that all wep networks can be cracked in 15 minutes?
    older versions of windows xp do not know WPA/WPA2 if you are running the latest service pack then it should support WPA or WPA2
    if for the life of you cannot determine the WEP password no matter how hard you try. i found mine by going into keychain and clicked on show password and there was my wifi password
    then you might as well just download the latest version of airport utility, write down all the important settings, and then use the reset button to erase everything and then reconfigure it from scratch. and then you will know your password.
    while you are there, if you can turn on wpa, by all means turn it on

  • How to set a WEP key in hexadecimal (26 characters)

    Hi everyone,
    I am installing an airport extreme 802.11n base station in my office and I need to keep the same WEP key as my previous access point. The format of the key is 26 hexadecimal digits.
    In the setup utility I tried to prefix the digits with a dollar sign but I doesn't seem to work with the new model (it keeps saying that I can only use 13 characters). I also tried to convert the key to ASCII but it is still rejected (probably because of the weird ASCII characters).
    Any suggestions?
    Cheers,
    Thomas

    One of the problems with WEP is that the actual standard relies on a 10 character HEX key for 40bit WEP and a 26 character HEX key for 128bit WEP.
    In order to make things easier for people, vendors use certain algorithms to convert simple alphanumeric passwords (or passphrases) into HEX keys, thus enabling people to use simple memorable WEP password rather than lengthy HEX keys.
    The problem is that different vendors use different algorithms to generate the HEX key and therefore a ASCII password on an AEBS will be hashed differently on a Netgear client and vice versa.
    One thing is a 13 character 128 bit WEP password will be hashed by all vendors in the same way (if you use 40bit WEP then a 5 character password is required).
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    AirPort: Joining an encrypted wireless network
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106424
    Choosing a password for networks that use Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP)
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=108058
    WPA
    "WPA Personal" on the Mac corresponds to plain WPA, with a pre-shared key (PSK) and TKIP encryption, on non-Apple wireless routers. The same alphanumeric password should work on both.

  • How to enter a WEP key

    I'm trying to join an existing wireless network of Windows machines. Connecting to the ZyXEL router software shows that it is using 64 bit WEP for its password and this is of the form 64 6F xx xx etc. However, entering this in the Airport configuration for the Mac does not allow me to connect. I've tried putting $ or & in front of the password to no effect. How do I enter this on the Mac?
    The Mac offers me 40 bit or 128 bit but not 64 bit. Is this relevant?
    Alternatively, if can I just change the router password to alphanumeric e.g. macfan?

    I've turned on 64 bit WEP on the router and entered a five letter password. I'm allowing broadcast of SSID while trying to fix this and the Mac can see the network but asking to join and selecting either just WEP Password or WEP 40 bit ASCII and entering the same five letter password, it fails to join and gives the error message invalid password.
    Bummer!
    an exact 5 ASCII character password should have worked for a WEP 40/64 bit key. But if it didn't, then it didn't.
    The router should be able to tell you the WEP Hex Equivalent Password. It should looks something like 1A2B3C4D5E (this is just a made up example, you must get the real hex value from your router). You enter this as the password.
    NOTE: Apple has played games with entering hex passwords over the years, and I DO NOT know the current rules, so I'm going to suggest you try 3 different ways to enter this hex value. One of them should work, or there is something else wrong.
    $1A2B3C4D5E
    0x1A2B3C4D5E
    1A2B3C4D5E
    One of these mentions of entering the WEP Hex Equivalent Password should work (I'm placing my bets on the leading dollar sign).

  • HNAP WEP Key Index

    Does anybody know how to get the WEP key index from a router using HNAP? What method to call and what is the schema?

    Haven't tried it, but if this driver supports your cards, then I hear it allows you to change the "key slot"...
    http://wirelessdriver.sourceforge.net/index.html
    From cspiff at /.
    http://apple.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/10/06/1938224
    "FYI, the Wi-Fi certification testing only tests one key at a time, in slot 1 (that's slot 0, if you count like a good C programmer). There are many things that the 802.11 specs allow, that are nevertheless outside of what Wi-Fi certifies. This is one of them.
    Let your sysadmin know that s/he's configured the network in a non-Wi-Fi-compliant manner, and maybe s/he'll see the light.

  • How do I locate my wep security key?

    where and how do i locate my wep security key

    The security key / passcode is set on your router. If you have an Apple Airport router (Extreme or Express), you would use the Airport Utility on your Mac (in Applications/Utilities) to configure it. If you have a router that was supplied by your ISP, the WEP key is often written on the bottom (and you can always ask your ISP). If you purchased a different router, you would have set up a passcode. You usually administer non-Apple routers by browsing to its private IP address, eg http://192.168.1.1 (or whatever your equivalent is; you can usually figure it out from your Mac's Network panel of System Preferences).
    Matt

  • How to locate my network security key

    I wrote this same request a month or so ago and can no longer locate my 'saved' message.  Would someone please forward me the link again on how to locate the network security key so I may add another computer to my wi-fi.
    And another question, will there be any change that more than one security key will appear and if so, how will I determine which key is the proper key to use?
    Thank you much.

    The "key" is another word for your normal wireless network "password", sometimes called a "pass phrase".
    The password generates a 64 character code of random letters and numbers. I doubt that this would be of any use to you, but if you want to see it.....
    Open AirPort Utility on your Mavericks Mac
    Click the AirPort icon, the click Edit
    Click the Base Station icon at the top of the screen
    Click Show Passwords
    More likely, you have a Windows Firewall issue, or Microsoft Security Essentials...if installed....is blocking the connection.  The anti-virus program can do the same thing.

  • How to use Remote key for linking two repository

    Hi,
    I have a challenge like not to repeate common tables like Company_code,Currency,Vendor name,customer name across all repositories.
    Is there any way I can use 'Remote key' to link different repository.
    I can create a Main table with all common attributes required across the repository but want to know how I can connect it to different repository.
    For example to get company-code in Vendor table , how can I link Company-code main table(customized) in another repository may be thru 'Remote key'.
    Going thru java api route is not prefffered for the sake of simple solution.
    Appreciate your help in providing any idea and detail steps for the process.
    -regards, Reo

    could you confirm the name and the existence of this file "IOMM_20121213_060736.csv" ?
    same error like:
    http://www.oracle-base.com/articles/9i/external-tables-9i.php
    if the load files have not been saved in the appropriate directory the following result will be displayed.
    SQL> SELECT *
      2  FROM   countries_ext
      3  ORDER BY country_name;
    SELECT *
    ERROR at line 1:
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    ORA-29400: data cartridge error
    KUP-04040: file Countries1.txt in EXT_TABLES not found
    ORA-06512: at "SYS.ORACLE_LOADER", line 14
    ORA-06512: at line 1Edited by: Fran on 10-ene-2013 23:32

  • How to set up wireless WEP keys in GPO? - possible?

    Summary:
    How to switch users from using Intel ProSet to manage their legacy SSID w/ WEP to using Windows Zero Config w/ both legacy & new SSID's automatically?
    Detail:
    Some of our sites are still using WEP for wireless encryption (believe it or not) over 802.11b AP's.
    We're in process of upgrading encryption from WEP to WPA2 & from 802.11b to 802.11a/g AP's.
    One immediate challenge we have is how to keep both networks in parallel and make this transparent to the end users.
    We can't cut all floors over at once, but need to do one floor at a time because users move from floor to floor.
    We were able to roll out the new network / SSID in Windows Zero Config through GPO, but learned that we can't do the same for the legacy SSID - setting WEP keys isn't an option in GPO, at least according to the server admins.
    Does any of you know how we can do this in an automatic & transparent fashion?
    So far we've been using sneaker net to switch users from Intel to Windows, & configure WEP keys in Windows, which is taking up way too much time.

    If you use a GPO to manage the wireless it will disable the intel proset software. This can have a negative impact, as you may have user that like to use the Proset when not in the office.
    If you are going to use GPOs then the transition should be pretty smooth, just setup the new secure SSID first and then roll out the GPO. There are several M$ patches that you should install as well. Do a search for Microsoft Wireless hotfix and rollup and you will find them.

  • My new smart TV recognizes my network, & asks, "Please enter you WEP keys (10 or 26 hex digits)" but my netwotk uses a password of 6 characters. How can I get my smart TV to connect to my network?

    I have a current iMac with the latest OS update.
    My new smart TV recognizes my network, & asks, “Please enter your WEP keys (10 or 26 hex digits).  My  Airport Express, an early model, only requires a password of less than 10 characters.
    When I open “airport utility,”on my iMac it tells me this version doesn’t support my base station & says go to “Airport Service & Support.”  That’s what got me here.
    My earlier MacBook runs OS 10.6.8. Its version of  Airport Utility works. Its Airport ID has 17 characters, & uses the same password to access the internet, but it also has a “wireless password” of 26 characters, but only shows me the dots. i haven’t the foggiest notion  what the characters are, if I put them in there years ago when i did the original configuration, or if they got there otherwise..
    I’m afraid of changing those settings for fear that I’l mess up the whole thing.
    How can I get my smart TV to connect to my network, ?

    Please check out the following AirPort User Tip on how to recover AirPort passwords.

  • What is a WEP key and how do I find mine?

    I'm trying to set up my Wi-Fi connection for my Nintendo DS, and in order to do so, I must enter my WEP key, however, I honestly have no idea what that is, or how to find it. I'm currently using a model wrt54gs v. 4

    Try these steps to get the network key from the router. Open
    an Internet Explorer browser page.In the address bar type - 192.168.1.1 Leave username blank & in password use admin.Click on the Wireless tab. Now Click on the Sub tab under Wireless > Wireless Security.
    Check the security mode and security key .

  • How do i change to a WEP key?

    I have no idea how to change to a WEP key so i can play my nintendo DS

    Welcome to the Cisco Home Community.
    You can refer to this document on how to setup your routers Security.
    The Search Function is your friend.... and Google too.
    How to Secure your Network
    How to Upgrade Routers Firmware
    Setting-Up a Router with DSL Internet Service
    Setting-Up a Router with Cable Internet Service
    How to Hard Reset or 30/30/30 your Router

  • I am trying to link our xbox and PC into our wireless network.  I am using an apple airport express and it is asking me for a WEP Key.  Where can I find my wep key?

    I am tyrying to link our xbox and PC int oour wireless network.  I am using an apple airport express and it is asking for my WEP Key.  Where do I find it?

    You should be able to setup WPA / WPA2 access, rather than WEP - which is old an less secure. (Unless your devices are too old for WPA??)
    Try this link: http://spotlight.getnetwise.org/wireless/wifitips/apple/apple-wpa.php
    **Edit
    Airport does support the WEP protocol.
    Apple Docs: http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?path=Airport/5.0/en/ap2084.html

  • How do I find my WEP key on my macbook pro?

    I am trying to hook up my blu ray player and it says that I need a WEP key and every time I put in my wifi router password it will not take it. It says The number of characters is invalid. Please check your entry and try again. My question is can I find the WEP key through my laptop and if so how do I find it. Any info would be greatly appreciated.

    You don't have a WEP key. Your security is set up using WPA or it is not set up for security at all.

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