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2009-12-10
, 22:24
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Posts: 516 |
Thanked: 643 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
@ Denmark/Poland
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#2
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2009-12-10
, 22:37
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Posts: 418 |
Thanked: 174 times |
Joined on Oct 2009
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#3
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Ad. 1: Try tcpdump. In general, yes, you should always be able to see the devices in the network (provided they are actually transmitting anything)
[edit] oh yes, here you need to be in a monitor mode. I don't know if N810 supports this, but I think I've read that not.
Ad.2
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=506102
It may be blackice, it maybe something else, to little info to tell.
Someone linked to an nmap book on Amazon and I actually added it to my 'want-this-for-xmas'-list.
I got two n00bish nmap questions:
1) Last night I found myself at the local Panera coffee shop. They provide free wifi after you accept the terms on a home-page.
There were maybe 5-7 people sitting working/playing on their laptops/smartphones and I wanted to see if I could do a scan of the devices connected to the network - but both nmap (using a nmap -sP 10.0.0.0/24 scan) and autoscan just showed the router and myself.
So, on networks like these - can I ever see the other devices - and if so how?
2) The device I think is the router gave this nmap result:
Using command: nmap -O -sS 10.0.0.0/24
Starting Nmap 4.76 ( http://nmap.org ) at 2009-12-08 19:49 PST
Interesting ports on 10.0.0.4:
Not shown: 989 closed ports
PORT STATE SERVICE
22/tcp open ssh
53/tcp open domain
80/tcp open http
161/tcp filtered snmp
443/tcp open https
8080/tcp open http-proxy
8081/tcp open blackice-icecap
8082/tcp open blackice-alerts
8088/tcp open unknown
8090/tcp open unknown
8093/tcp open unknown
MAC Address: (withheld) (Colubris Networks)
I'm particularly curious about the 8081 and 8082 outputs.
Anyone know what these are?
I luv Google