Re: Looking for a wifi radar which tells the direction of the frames of an AP is comi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
hannah
I have now downloaded the OSWA ISO and here are couple of issues:
1. I do not think the developers want this ISO to run under any virtual environment
2. Very poor mouse integration under Virtual Box Practically unoperable
3. VMWare installation was better however just about any apps you open including moocherhunter, when you right click inside the shell the app just vanishes. Basically you need to just work in command line (which is ok)
Yes, I don't think the distro was made with virtualization in mind, either.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
hannah
4. Here is the nail in the coffin: Moocherhunter only supports the following chipsets: PRISM54G, ATHEROS, RTL8187, RT2500, RT2570, IPW2200, IPW2915 where as I have: ID 148f:3070 Ralink Technology, Corp. RT2870/RT3070 Wireless Adapter
I'm sorry to hear that. When I first discovered moocherhunter, I had at least one of the those, so the limitations weren't an issue for me.
Either way, it won't work the way you want. As I understand, you don't want to use a directional antenna, and this is an important piece of hardware for this method to work, because you'll just need to point it and check were the signal strength is better. With omnidirectional antennas, you'll have to wander in circles in order to determine the direction of the frames, and still it would be very difficult.
Re: Looking for a wifi radar which tells the direction of the frames of an AP is comi
@Snayler : yes, thanks for filling in for my bad memory and approximate terms :) I wasn't too far off though ! And I agree with everything else you said, so you save me some time and thinking !
Re: Looking for a wifi radar which tells the direction of the frames of an AP is comi
Yeah.. using directional antenna will just make me too obvious. I will just keep using WiFiFoFum in my Iphone. Does close enough job.
Thanks to all and still looking.
Re: Looking for a wifi radar which tells the direction of the frames of an AP is comi
I use wigle to perform a big area scan (android APP) and import the map on google maps.
Then use another android APP called "analizzatore di rete" to refine my search.
Re: Looking for a wifi radar which tells the direction of the frames of an AP is comi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
SilicaG
I use
wigle to perform a big area scan (android APP) and import the map on google maps.
Then use another android APP called
"analizzatore di rete" to refine my search.
Ok..my better half has got a Galaxy 3 phone.. I gotta try this out.. thanks for pointing this out.. cheers
Re: Looking for a wifi radar which tells the direction of the frames of an AP is comi
Any wifi device has an omnidirectional antenna, which receives signals from anywhere. The only way to use this is for you to physically move closer and further away from the source, to determine its location out of signal strength. This is why a directional antenna, of any size, would be helpful. Seems like a small -panel- antenna would be inconspicuous.
Re: Looking for a wifi radar which tells the direction of the frames of an AP is comi
Now have tried wigle and Wifi Analyzer in Android. Looks good as well. Thanks for the advice.
Re: Looking for a wifi radar which tells the direction of the frames of an AP is comi
WiFiFoFum doesn't really tell you what direction the signal is coming from either. It's just guessing, and throwing the ssid's on the "radar" image based on signal strength. You'll never get a very accurate picture from a single omnidirectional antenna. Even with a directional antenna you might get a direction, but depending on the environment, you might actually get a better signal off a reflection, which might actually be stronger if something else is directly between you and the ap. Anybody who's played in a fox and hound hunt will tell you this.
Re: Looking for a wifi radar which tells the direction of the frames of an AP is comi
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Barry
WiFiFoFum doesn't really tell you what direction the signal is coming from either. It's just guessing, and throwing the ssid's on the "radar" image based on signal strength.
You are very right. However in the radar screen it does tell you if the signal is getting stronger when you walk around. Kind of approximate guess. Yes I do get it that it's not possible to pin point the location of the AP and that is not the goal either. The goal is to get closer and get a better signal strength so that we can crack it say with 'reaver' tool.