On Sunday 17 July 2005 13:27, Ez-Aton wrote: > The problem was not with the distance, but with the frequencies. BT used > frequencies previously used by IDF, so it was illegal (and distance). > Now these freqs are open for BT devices, which, in turn, can reach 100M. I don't want to start a war, but who's right, you or Geoffrey S. Mendelson who wrote that it's illegal?
And if it is legal, I'm back to my original questions - mainly, can anyone recommend a dongle that is known to work in Israel. > Actually, the 10M reach up to 5-7M without disturbances, so I tend to > believe the 100M gets to be shorter than that. I don't really care about the distance since as I say, it would be used for hotsyncing at home and 1 or 2 meters is good enough. As I already wrote, at a very short range, I don't see a security problem because the potential hacker would have to be in the room with me. -- Shlomo Solomon http://the-solomons.net Sent by KMail 1.7.1 (KDE 3.2.3) on LINUX Mandrake 10.1 ================================================================= To unsubscribe, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the word "unsubscribe" in the message body, e.g., run the command echo unsubscribe | mail [EMAIL PROTECTED]