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View Full Version : AirMagnet 4.0


marlof
07-16-2004, 02:00 PM
<div class='os_post_top_link'><a href='http://www.airmagnet.com/products/handheld.htm' target='_blank'>http://www.airmagnet.com/products/handheld.htm</a><br /><br /></div>AirMagnet Handheld is a solution that offers you an amazing amount of tools to deal with security and performance issues on your Wireless LAN right from your WLAN enabled Pocket PC. New in version 4.0 are among others additional security and performance alarms, tools for troubleshooting Voice over WLAN (!) and expanded authentication support. This solution can do so much that it would be pretty hard to sum it all up in this post. If you're interested (and if your a network administrator, you really should be), check out the <a href="http://www.airmagnet.com/products/handheld_tour.htm">product tour</a> and the <a href="http://www.airmagnet.com/products/assets/Handheld.4_0.Datasheet.pdf">datasheet</a> in .PDF format. AirMagnet is only sold through <a href="http://www.airmagnet.com/resellers/channels.htm">specific resellers</a> for a price starting at $2,995 for the handheld version.<br /><br /><img src="http://www.pocketpcthoughts.com/images/web/2003/marlof-july04-airmagnet.jpg" />

christak
07-16-2004, 02:42 PM
...for a price starting at $2,995 for the handheld version...

I guess they only need to sell a couple of copies at that price...
:lol:

mar2k
07-16-2004, 03:32 PM
$2995.00 for a Pocket PC application? No offense, but I would think most network administrators would be using an ultralight laptop for this kind of thing. It does look pretty cool though... :mrgreen:

Kati Compton
07-16-2004, 03:46 PM
Um... is that a typo? 8O 8O 8O

marlof
07-16-2004, 04:01 PM
Um... is that a typo? 8O 8O 8O

Ummm..... no (http://www.airmagnet.com/news/news.7_12_04.htm). From the linked press release:
AirMagnet Laptop Trio starts at $3,495, and AirMagnet Handheld 4.0 at $2,995. All products are available immediately. And they do add that the Pocket PC and wireless card aren't included. ;)

corphack
07-16-2004, 04:13 PM
but I would think most network administrators would be using an ultralight laptop for this kind of thing.

They also have a laptop / tablet pc version (I have 4 on-order) and the PDA version only does 802.11b whereas the other versions do 802.11a/b/g

surur
07-16-2004, 04:56 PM
Im sure the open source version will soon come along to destroy thier business plan.

Surur

david291
07-16-2004, 08:56 PM
Mission critical business software is always expensive. Our Pocket PC software is $1500 for the first license, $500 for each additional license at the same site. We get two to five site orders per week.

christak
07-16-2004, 09:07 PM
Mission critical business software ....

Is this mission critical? Maybe I'm missing something (certainly possible), but I find this price way out of line for the capability the software provides...

$3k for a single license would be a "very" hard sell in my organization...

corphack
07-17-2004, 12:24 AM
Is this mission critical?

depends upon your organization; in a fortune 10 company with 200K+ employees worldwide (such as my current employer) the inability to detect unauthorized access points is considered a lapse in security, and an audit issue.

also depends upon your overall security plan: alone the airmagnet software provides limited utility, but it well compliments a centralized detection strategy as the terminal component of a larger system (which is how we use them). The centrally connected sensors detect the presence of the rogue AP, and the AirMagnet systems are then used to sniff them out.

The costs also cover support, R&D, bondng, sourcecode escrow, etc. components which our corporate legal policies require of any outside agency in order to be able to do business with us.

At $3K/ license, individual non-commercial users are not AirMagnet's target market.

gry
07-17-2004, 01:25 AM
I can vouch for the software, we have the distributed version (APs and central management system) deployed and it controls the airspace, provides rogue AP containment (a lot more secure than detection), and assists us with troubleshooting at our main campus.

It effectively displaces less powerful security software like Air Defense.

And no, I do not work for them.

bk227865
07-17-2004, 07:29 PM
If it is just for detecting wireless AP's one might give WIFIFOFUM a try

find's even my companie's AP's , although the SSID is not showing (maybe encrypted ?) shows if wep is on or of , mac adress , speed...

The radar is just for show , dous not show the real position of the AP , but how stronger it is how closer to the center it gets. Possibility to add a GPS for war- driving , boating , kayaking ect .... seems to be a feature to :)

http://www.wififofum.org/

gry
07-18-2004, 04:06 AM
It does a lot more than just detect rogues.

It can prevent clients from connecting to rogue APs, so in a sense it is a rogue access point wireless containment solution. We also use it like NetXray (SnifferPro) and can sniff 802.11 frames.

To date, only Aruba Networks, Airespace, and Air Magnet can be used as rogue access point wireless containment solutions and "jam" (send deauth) messages to clients attempting to connect to a rogue access points.

Air Magnet Distributed and Aruba Networks RF Lock Air Monitors are the only solutions we've deployed that can handle out of geography channels (non-standard North American channels such as EMEA, French, and Japanese channels). We've detected hackers leaving Japanese APs connected to ports on campus. It's good we picked Aruba and Air Magnet because Airespace would have missed it.