WEP stands for Wired Equivalent Privacy - it is a form of wireless encryption which stops unauthorised people accessing a router or encrypted data. On the PSP, the WEP key is the decryption key for a specific router - so you'd use the same WEP key your PC or laptop uses to connect to your wireless router, then the PSP can use it too.
Wireless routers can be secured by using different types of encryption, which require an encryption key to download. So if your router uses 'WEP' encryption, then you'd select WEP on the PSP, before entering the WEP key specific to your router.
The WEP key is the same one your PC or laptop uses to access your wireless router. If you don't have a wireless router, then you're looking at someone else's, the WEP key is actually there to stop unauthorised people like you from accessing it.
The WEP key is part of your router and it would be the same thing your PC or laptops use to connect to your wireless network. On Windows 7 you can left click on your connection icon, right click on your connection and select properties, then on the security tab there's the option to show your WEP key. Or, you could check your router's documentation, as you can log into the router's control panel through a PC browser, you can see the WEP key there. Lastly, sometimes the WEP key is on a label on the router itself, as part of its default settings, check that also.
The 'WEP' key is the encryption key set by the owner of the wireless router. If it's your own router, then you should already know the WEP key, it's the same one your PC/Laptop uses to connect. If it's someone else's router, then you'd need to get their permission. Otherwise the encryption is doing its job fine and keeping unauthorised people off the network.
WEP stands for Wired Equivalent Privacy - it is a form of wireless encryption which stops unauthorised people accessing a router or encrypted data. On the PSP, the WEP key is the decryption key for a specific router - so you'd use the same WEP key your PC or laptop uses to connect to your wireless router, then the PSP can use it too.
You need to ask the owner of the router.
Wireless routers can be secured by using different types of encryption, which require an encryption key to download. So if your router uses 'WEP' encryption, then you'd select WEP on the PSP, before entering the WEP key specific to your router.
The WEP key is the same one your PC or laptop uses to access your wireless router. If you don't have a wireless router, then you're looking at someone else's, the WEP key is actually there to stop unauthorised people like you from accessing it.
The WEP key is part of your router and it would be the same thing your PC or laptops use to connect to your wireless network. On Windows 7 you can left click on your connection icon, right click on your connection and select properties, then on the security tab there's the option to show your WEP key. Or, you could check your router's documentation, as you can log into the router's control panel through a PC browser, you can see the WEP key there. Lastly, sometimes the WEP key is on a label on the router itself, as part of its default settings, check that also.
It's the same access key you use to access your wireless router. Use the same one that your PC/Laptop uses.
The WEP key is unique to the installation. There is no master key.
Probably 578511 is an error indication but i know that a wep key has to have letters in it so 578511 is not a wep key.
The 'WEP' key is the encryption key set by the owner of the wireless router. If it's your own router, then you should already know the WEP key, it's the same one your PC/Laptop uses to connect. If it's someone else's router, then you'd need to get their permission. Otherwise the encryption is doing its job fine and keeping unauthorised people off the network.
No. Your WEP key is the password placed on the router you are trying to access.
A wep key has nothing to do with Pokémon Pearl, it is your wireless router's password.
No. The WEP key is a separate password.