03-24-2009
I'm sorry if I weren't clear on the subject. I'm not talking about hacking into someones phone. I was talking about accessing the internet when not working on a desktop PC, but "on the road". Since I'm living and working in a densely populated area, there's an abundance of "open" access points to use, which is cheaper by far than any mobile access plan I know.
Thus my answer above "Rarely", since it's only in rare cases that I have to use my mobile to go online (as opposed to "want to"). Mobile phones, IMO, are for calling someone, and the odd text message.
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mip6d(1) Mobile IPv6 and NEMO Daemon mip6d(1)
NAME
mip6d - UMIP Mobile IPv6 and NEMO Basic Support protocol implementation
SYNOPSIS
mip6d [options]
DESCRIPTION
Mobile IPv6 and NEMO Basic Support implementation
OPTIONS
-V, --version
Display version information and copyright
-?, -h, --help
Display this help text
-c <file>
Read configuration from <file>. If option is not present, default path (/etc/mip6d.conf) is used.
These options override values read from config file:
-d <number>
Set debug level (0-10)
-C, --correspondent-node
Node is CN
-H, --home-agent
Node is HA
-M, --mobile-node
Node is MN
SIGNALS
The following signals can be sent to the daemon:
SIGHUP
Reload the configuration. See mip6d.conf(5) for information on supported option reload.
SIGINT, SIGTERM
Terminates the daemon operation.
FILES
/etc/mip6d.conf
SEE ALSO
mip6d.conf(5), mipv6(7),
RFC6275: Mobility Support in IPv6
RFC3776: Using IPsec to Protect Mobile IPv6 Signaling Between Mobile Nodes and Home Agents
RFC4877: Mobile IPv6 Operation with IKEv2 and the Revised IPsec Architecture
RFC3963: Network Mobility (NEMO) Basic Support Protocol
May 16, 2005 mip6d(1)