Where are the security keys???

I bought a cisco router with storage a few weeks ago.  I set it up and now I have 5 wireless devices assigned/connected to the  router.  Now I bought a HP Printer I need to connected  wirelessly.  I thought I wrote down the correct security key, WPA security, but  I cannot get it to connect.  So I logged into the router using 192.168.1.1 and it asked me for my user name and password.  After I logged in I looked at all the menus and did not find any listing for my security keys or a way to change them.  Has this something with Cisco connect?  If so how do I find out the keys I used???

1. I'll give you that. There is room for arrow keys.
2. Nobody is forcing you to do anything. There are BT keyboards with arrowe keys out there you can use. And many amny editors in the App store you can use if you don't like the built in Notes App or even Pages.
3. There is a feature know as the Magnifying glass, that lets you position the cursor with pin point accuracy.  It can be used by holding your finger on the word for amoment and it will pop up. You can then drag the cursor to any letter you want.  This is the way most people position the cursor exactly where they want it.
Page 24 of the user manual covers this.
http://manuals.info.apple.com/MANUALS/1000/MA1595/en_US/ipad_user_guide.pdf
With that said, you are welcome to provide the suggestion to Apple, at their feedback page.
Apple.com/feedback

Similar Messages

  • HT4628 where is the security key?

    where is the security key?

    "Security key" is a term that some manufacturers use for your wireless network password or passcode.
    In rare circumstances some products might require the actual 64 digit hex code that is generated by the password. If your device is asking for a very long code of numbers and letters, post back to tell us what operating system you are using on your computer.
    I've never had to use the hex code in 20+ years, but you never know.

  • German Keyboard (Where are the ä, ö and ü keys???)

    It is great that the iPhone offers different keyboards and that the word corrections are adjusted accordingly, BUT where are the special characters such as ä, ö and ü??? I couldn't find them on the German keyboard. Any ideas?? Thanks.

    It actually works with c, e, i, l, n, s, y and z keys too. The objective appears to be to give easy access to all language-specific accented characters from any keyboard where those character-variants are not on their selected keyboard's display. It certainly works well and is an 'in-line' way of providing easy-access to the facility without cluttering the display still further with more options that are seldom used by most people in most cases.

  • Where are the security preference files in SL?

    Some apps (e.g. iTunes) keep asking me if I want to Allow or Deny incoming connections when they're launched.
    In the Security > Advanced window/list these apps definitely are properly set (i.e. to allow/green) but some apps still keep asking me if I want to allow or deny every time they are launched.
    I deleted the com.apple.security.plist file, but after rebooting, the list remains for the Allow/Block apps... as well as the Security > Advanced boxes either being checked or not.
    So... it appears there must be more than one plist file (i.e. com.apple.security.plist file) that I must delete to reset the Security Advanced window.
    I have also deleted apps from the Security > Advanced list (via the ' - ' button just below the list) and for the first launch of these apps the display of the dialog box asking to allow or deny disappears, but upon the second launch they again display a dialog box asking whether I want to allow or deny connections. And yes, I looked and they are properly set as to whether to allow or block (green or red respectively).
    This began after one of the last updates many months ago. I'm only now posting because it's getting on my nerves and I haven't been able to figure it out.
    Any ideas?
    Thanks.
    Ron

    Get yourself fcprescue for your version of fcp.
    It trashes all the prefs (which are stashed in a couple of places.) It also allows you to save a good set. Then it's a matter of two clicks to trash bad prefs and put your good ones back.
    It's a must have.
    www.pistolerapost2.com/fcprescue

  • Where are the security updates stored? i need to check what i instaled

    i got wrong info here from someone.
    where are secrity updates stored on macbook pro? osx 10.5.5
    many thanks!
    alexis charalambous

    1. Macintosh HD>LIbrary>Receipts, or
    2. System Preferences>Software Update>Installed Updates

  • Oracle XE, where are the security patches? ( Pete Finnigan)

    http://www.petefinnigan.com/weblog/archives/00000973.htm
    Good that somebody worry about Oracle XE users security. I must agree with Pete that "its not a good idea to expose it to the internet even via a web based application". What do you think about Oracle XE security?

    Is there a legitimate concern here or is this an "Open ended write me an essay" question?
    ~Jer

  • Where are the home and end buttons

    so i'm new to mac and purchased a mac book pro and that's when it hit me, where are the Insert, Home, End, Page Up, Page Down keys? Where are the arrow keys. I'm not much of a track pad user and although I think it is awesome I like to keep my hands on the keyboard as much as possible.
    Also, is it me or does the Delete key on a Mac move in the wrong direction (from right to left instead of left to right)?

    Welcome to Apple Support Communities.
    The answer is the Fn key...
    Held down in addition to the Left arrow is Home, with the Right arrow key is End, with the Up arrow key is PgUp, with the Down arrow key is PgDn, and with to the Delete key is Forward Delete.
    You might find it helpful to enable the Keyboard Viewer in Hardware, Keyboard, Show Keyboard viewer in menu bar. On OS X 10.6 it displays a flag for your selected country. (Not sure about OS X Lion 10.7 though.) When enabled, click on the flag and select Show Keyboard Viewer. As you press Shift, Fn, Ctrl, Alt/Option, and Command you will see onscreen what keystrokes result, separately and in combination.

  • HT1620 Where do I look for the security key when I download an item.  Your website says your key is 0xD0261077

    Where do I look for the security key when I download an item.  Your website says your key is 0xD0261077?

    Your question is somewhat terse, and I might infer you're conflating the PGP key used for Apple security-related email communications with cryptographic hashes (message digests) used to verify the integrity and the origin of files, and with digitally-signed binaries.  While these areas are somewhat related, details vary.  (If you're already familiar with this stuff, my apologies.)
    The Apple PGP key is used to sign (verify) messages from the security folks at Apple, and can be to encrypt messages sent to the Apple security folks.  See this Apple Security PGP web page for details on using the PGP key for message verification and for message encryption.
    File downloads are implemented differently, and will generally involve a particular cryptographic hash or message digest (and not necessarily a PGP key), and what might be used used varies by the particular website and the download involved, with some sites using the older and insecure MD5, and with others increasingly using some variation of the less-insecure SHA cryptographic hash.  Depending on the scheme used, these can protect against corruptions, or can also be used to sign the binaries.  The system that Apple is encouraging developers to use is called Developer ID.
    Shell commands used and useful here include md5 and various openssl commands for the sha hashes/digests.
    If you have a particular public web site or file download, post a pointer and I'll have a look.

  • Where are the plus and minus keys on a Pavilion dv6-3150us Entertainment Notebook?

    Where are the plus and minus keys on a Pavilion dv6-3150us Entertainment Notebook?  Joe
    Joe B.

    Its on the keyboard somewhere on top center close to the number keys. To be straight, its just below F12 key. 
    //Click on Kudos and Accept as Solution if my reply was helpful and answered your question//
    I am an HP employee!!

  • Where did the Secure Site Icon go ?

    I know the status bar was removed and an and on bar replaces it but
    Where did the Secure Site Icon go ? Will not use FF without it !
    I cant find anything about it. ( FF 40b7 ) How do I get it back ?
    Not so little things like this will hurt FF. And YES I understand this is beta but come on guys/gals this is IMPORTANT !
    I probably just missed something stupid but I could use some help please.

    Every financial institution (bank, credit union,...), every news outlet (print/TV/Radio/blog) reaches out to millions of elderdly folks and other non-geeks and tells them to run away as soon as they dont see a Key or Lock on a secured page (or maybe so-called secured page from what I get you are trying to push through).
    This is a major Change Management disaster waiting to happen... Not just for Firefox but for every web site using secure transactions. Countless organisations are going to get calls from users telling them, "Your site is not secured, Oprah and CNN told me so".
    Go for color scheme or other visual indicator to warn of security level, but absolutely dont lose the icon !
    Regards,
    Stephane

  • Where are the .joboptions stored on a Mac for InDesign CC?

    Where are the .joboptions stored on a Mac for InDesign CC?
    I put them in the usual directory:      /Library/Application Support/Adobe/Adobe PDF/Settings   .  .  . but they are not seen by InDesign CC.
    . . . Photoshop, Illustrator, Distiller and Acrobat are seeing my custom profiles and any default profiles I removed are not there for those apps.
    Even older versions of all these apps and InDesign 6 and 5 see my custom profiles.
    But InDesign CC only shows the ones shown in the screen shot below:  (High Quality, the PDF/X versions[3], Press and Smallest size)
    I know I can probably do a "Load" profile, but that's not the point and I need to remove the default profiles.
    I'm in a multiple user environment and need to lock down the use of profiles to our companies select few.
    Did a thorough search of the entire Mac and PDF/X- does not even show up.   Any suggestions?     Anyone?    I'm scratchin'  my head at this point.

      This was the correct answer:
           Laubender     Jun 2, 2014 12:18 AM  (in response to Maurice Castelbuono)   
    @Maurizio – the standard settings, the joboption files with the brackets like [PDF/X-1a:2001] are stored inside the inDesign app for InDesign CC 9.2.1.
    The path for these would be:
    /Applications/Adobe InDesign CC.app/Contents/MacOS/Resources/Adobe PDF/settings/mul
    or with a Japanese version of InDesign:
    /Applications/Adobe InDesign CC.app/Contents/MacOS/Resources/Adobe PDF/settings/japan
    If you do a right-click on the InDesign app you can show them with "Show Package Contents" options.
    All other PDF joboptions that you are creating are relative to your current User Library. They are stored in:
    ~/Library/Application Support/Adobe/Adobe PDF/Settings
    Where the tilde sign at the beginning indicates the home of the currently used user.
    You can access ~/Library, if you press the alt key when accessing the "Go To" menu in the Finder. Otherwise it's invisible.
    Uwe

  • WHERE ARE THE INSTRUCTIONS ON HOW TO POST TO THIS ...

    The Community feature is utterly USELESS -- USE UNFRIENDLY -- GUESS YOU DON'T WANT ANYONE TO USE THIS FEATURE -- WHERE ARE THE INSTRUCTIONS ON HOW TO POST????
    Any help would be greatly appreciated and hopefully reduce my frustration.  Thanks so much! 
    Edited to conform with the Community Guidelines and Etiquette
    Duplicate information removed.

    Hi, maggilizx,
    Here is the link to the information, which appears on the first page of the Community, a screen shot of which is below.
    http://community.skype.com/t5/News-Announcements-and-Special/Welcome-to-the-Skype-Support-Network/ba...
    Regards,
    Elaine
    Was your question answered? Please click on the Accept as a Solution link so everyone can quickly find what works! Like a post or want to say, "Thank You" - ?? Click on the Kudos button!
    Trustworthy information: Brian Krebs: 3 Basic Rules for Online Safety and Consumer Reports: Guide to Internet Security Online Safety Tip: Change your passwords often!

  • What Are the Security Implications of not Completely Signing Database?

    Hello everyone,
    What are the security implications of not completely signing the database?
    From http://www.archlinux.org/pacman/ ,
    The following quote implies that the database exists merely just in case hand tweaking is necessary:
    maintains a text-based package database (more of a hierarchy), just in case some hand tweaking is necessary.
    However, considering that there are cases that pacman's local database needs to be restored, there are implications that the database is essential for pacman to function properly.
    From https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Ho … l_Database :
    Restore pacman's local database
    Signs that pacman needs a local database restoration:
    - pacman -Q gives absolutely no output, and pacman -Syu erroneously reports that the system is up to date.
    - When trying to install a package using pacman -S package, and it outputs a list of already satisfied dependencies.
    - When testdb (part of pacman) reports database inconsistency.
    Most likely, pacman's database of installed software, /var/lib/pacman/local, has been corrupted or deleted. While this is a serious problem, it can be restored by following the instructions below.
    I know that all official packages (from core, extra, community, etc.) are signed so that all files should be safe, but I'm just paranoid.
    What if the database was hacked?  Will this lead to installation of harmful software?
    Sincerely,
    Cylinder57
    Last edited by Cylinder57 (2012-10-15 03:42:31)

    Cylinder57 wrote:
    From this quote:
    Allan wrote:But, the OP (also?) talks about the local package database on his computer.  That is not signed at all as there is no point.  If someone can modify that, then they can regenerate the signature, or just modify any other piece of software on your computer.
    Is it going to be easy for anyone other than the authorized user to modify the local package database?
    Allan basically answered that with the quote above already as I understand it. Someone who has access to the installation, e.g. is able chrooting your PC via USB, is not held back by any ACLs. However, modifying the local database only makes limited sense because the packages are already installed. Pacman would only recheck, if you re-install a package. The only really relevant attack vector for the package database is
    (1) installing an older package with a vulnerability,
    (2) re-placing the up-to-date package sig in the local database with the older one and
    (3) modifying the system, e.g. via pacman.conf excludes, to not update that.
    then also re-installing would not create a sig-error and you get stuck with the bogus old package.
    With a signed database this would not be possible. However, as Allan wrote earlier also with a signed database that criminal can manually install (totally leaving pacman & package cache) whatever it needs in this scenario. So, if you are -really- paranoid about that, you probably want to spend (a lot of configuring) time with something like the "aide" package.
    Cylinder57 wrote:
    And, are the following statements correct:
    If the repository databases are modified, the hacker might be able to modify the packages on the server (Considering that if someone can modify the local package database, that person can modify any other piece of software on that particular computer.)
    However, pacman won't let users from installing the modified packages (due to package signing,) unless at one person with access is bribed (at least, for an individual package.)
    I don't know the intricacies of the server infrastructure - only saw they have great names :-), but I am pretty certain your statements assume that correctly. It is pretty unlikely that someone able to modify the central repository database fails at placing a bogus package for shipping with those access rights at this time. Yet it does no harm not to post any details of such a scenario here imo. In any case: A compromised mirror would be enough for that - and easier to achieve (hacked anywhere or e.g. in a non-democratic state). Plus you also answered it yourself. The keys are key for our safety there. Which keeps me hoping that no criminal lawnmover salesmen frequent the Brisbane area.
    As you put up a thread about this, one question you can ask yourself is:
    Have you always checked on updates new signatures keys which pacman asks about? If you ever pressed "accept/enter" without checking them out-of-band (e.g. the webserver), that compromised mirror database might have just created a "legitimate" key .. user error, but another attack vector the database signing would catch.
    edit: Re-thinking the last paragraph just after posting, I now believe it would not be that easy as implied - simply because the bogus key is not trusted by one of the master keys. The pacman pgp trust model should catch that without database signing. At least it would if only the official repositories are activated, but that's a pre-requisite to the whole thread.
    Last edited by Strike0 (2012-10-20 23:01:26)

  • Where is the DELETE key -- and I don't mean "backspace"

    Every PC of any stripe that I have ever owned -- and we're talking a lot of machines in nearly 30 years of this -- has had two 'delete' keys.
    One is a backspace key -- it erases characters in before the cursor. It's usually found above the enter/return key, where the backspace key used to be on those old-fangled typewriter machines.
    The other key was a "delete" key -- which would erase characters that apper AFTER the cursor. There the backspace key would erase backwards, the delete key would erase forwards.
    So, where is the DELETE key on a Mac keyboard? Is there some combination of keys that will serve that purpose? Or does somebody really think I'm going to move the cursor to the end of some place and delete backwards ALL the time?
    I read in yesterday's Wall Street Journal that Steve Jobs doesn't like buttons, but this is ridiculous. It could, in fact be a fatal error... I've still got 10 days to take this thing back...
    --PS

    I don't suppose there is any kind of utility program that would let me re-map they keyboard, so that I could make, say, the "enter" key at the bottom into a "forward-delete" key (I never use that enter key, my hands are trained to use the "enter/return" key where it's always been on a typewriter -- yeah, I'm that old...)
    Either buried on the Mac somewhere or a third party program that would let me do that? Would sure make the MacBook more liveable... I delete a LOT!
    Thanks,
    --PS

  • Where is the security icon?

    Where is the security icon that tells you a site is secure on the new Foxfire?

    The old padlock icon was removed, I am not sure but I wondered if it had become too easy to spoof. Now''' use the site identity button''', note it changes colour, and if you click it on a secure site it provides move information and displays the padlock.
    See [[site identity button]] <-- clickable link --
    There are also add-ons that can restore a similar padlock security icon feature.

Maybe you are looking for