On Thu, Jun 28, 2012 at 3:56 PM, Rick Hodgin <[email protected]> wrote: > Centrino chipsets now support vPro. The technology exists to wield > out-of-band communication through WiFi ... though I honestly have no idea on > the mechanics of how they do it. > > Do general purpose (consumer) WiFi routers honor out-of-band communication > requests out of the box (without an explicit setup to the contrary)? I would > suggest that if this technology exists to utilize something like vPro, that > the manufacturers of those devices are "playing nice" with the reasons why > they exist in the first place. Only a guess though. I could be completely > wrong.
"Out of band" means other than the communications medium being discussed. If it travels over the ethernet wire, it's ethernet, and explicitly NOT out of band. Ditto Wifi. Most consumer equipment bridges wifi to the local LAN, meaning any computer on the local LAN can talk to any other computer on the local LAN, including Wifi, no restrictions. All of these computers are firewalled from the 'net in such a way that computers on the 'net cannot talk to ANY computer on the local LAN (the wireless router literally just discards any attempt) without a computer on the local LAN having asked the computer on the 'net to talk first. --tim _______________________________________________ Freedombox-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.alioth.debian.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/freedombox-discuss
