No, the WEP key is the encryption code used to access your network. If you did a scan for active networks, the things you see are the 'SSN', the network 'names'.
Yes, it is. WEP is one form of security for a wireless network, the key is required to decrypt it.
The WEP key is the password for the wireless network. If you generate the key in dessid, when you try to join the network you can tap in the password box and select "Paste." Then the key will be pasted in and you can join the network.
well, my friend. Everybody has there own different WEP key
No The WEP key is the key used to encrypt the wireless traffic, so people can't sniff the data and see what your doing. No WEP key, no connect to the network. No router password, and you can't log into the router to modify the WEP key.
The WEP key is the encryption key used to access the wireless network. The keys are only given to people who the network owner has authorised to use it, so it keeps unauthorised people (ie, you) off it.
The WEP key is the encryption key needed to access the wireless network. Only people who are authorised to use it, will know the key, keeping unauthorised people off.
Ask the owner of the network.
The WEP key is the encryption key your wireless router uses to stop unauthorised people accessing the network. When you set yours up, you'll have set the key so your computer or laptop can access your network. All you need to do is use that same key on the DSi to access the network.
Wired Equivalent Privacy (WEP) codes are encryption keys used in wireless networks. When configured to use WEP, the network administrator will create a WEP key and then provide it to the network clients. WEP is no longer considered to be secure, and WPA/WPA2 have replaced it in most recent equipment. If you need to access a WEP-encrypted network on your Nintendo DSi, you should talk to whomever owns the network.
A WEP key is like a lock that protects your wi-fi connection from being used by "unauthorised people". It's not just for DS games, it's part of the router. If you don't know a router's WEP key, then you aren't authorised to use it.
The WEP key is the encryption password used to access the network. The network owner has the password, and only puts it on devices that are authorised to use it. That's how it keeps unauthorised people (ie, you) from connecting to it.
You configure them when setting up your wireless router. The SSID is the 'name' it broadcasts, and the WEP key is the code a device needs to be able to unencrypt data sent by it. Once you've got the router set up, you can enter the SSID and WEP key into the DS, to allow it to connect to your router.