Last Updated: May 2, 2018 You can read Kindle books on your Mac thanks to but the Kindle for Mac page numbers system can be a bit confusing. The reason is because it depends on whether the book you are reading includes page numbers as a feature. Strange as it sounds, not all Kindle books do. Kindles use a text location based system for navigating books and the real pages numbers that appear in the print version are not always included as an option. Here’s how to find if your book supports page numbers and how to show them on Kindle For Mac. The best way to check if a book includes the page number feature is by checking the Kindle Edition product detail page on the Amazon website. As you can see below, next to the “Length” bullet point, it will indicate whether the book has real pages with a note such as: “Contains real page numbers based on the print edition (ISBN )”. To then show the real page numbers on Kindle for Mac: 1. Kindle Fire: How to Locate the Device’s MAC Address Posted December 1, 2011 by Rob Rogers in Android, Entertainment If your wireless router uses MAC filtering, you will need to know the Wi-Fi MAC address of your Kindle Fire so that it may connect to the internet. Entering the MAC address of the Kindle Fire into your firewall or router settings will tell the device or software to allow your device to access the Web. If you're looking for the current IP address of your Kindle Fire, tap “Wireless” in the “Settings” menu and touch the network to which you are connected. Open the book on your Kindle and press the Kindle Menu button 2. Change the View Style at the bottom of the book from Location or Reading Progress to Page Numbers 3. You’ll then be able to see page numbers on your Kindle next to the Location at the bottom of the screen: If you have any problems or questions finding the page numbers on your Kindle, let us know in the comments below. If your, you need to or you’re having any other problems, let us know in the comments below. I'm not new to home networking and I've been running DD-WRT routers for years. I'm a software developer, so 'technologically' curious by nature but admittedly have never really researched in-depth low level technical details of networking. I'm probably being paranoid and plan on doing further research and learning on my own, but I've been seeing strange things on my home network lately. The one I wanted to ask about here was regarding private MAC Addresses. By that I mean when I look up the MAC Address through the DD-WRT OUI Lookup, it's designated as private. Google knows all, but I can't really find anything in plain English about typical use or scenarios where they would be used. I have a private MAC address showing up on my LAN with a DHCP assigned IP address that I haven't been able to identify. I've used NMap pointed at the IP associated with the 'private' MAC address but it can't identify anything about it either. It cannot identify the vendor/manufacturer, the O/S, or anything else. I'm looking for any information that may be useful in helping me understand where and what this device may be. Other info: I've recently updated the WPA2 password from pretty secure to 13+ character length after seeing a 'ghost' (aka evil twin) access point/SSID that I also can't identify. Additionally, for now (even though I know it's not a secure solution) I've filtered the offending 'private' MAC address from accessing my home networks. Private registrations are either MA-L, MA-M, or MA-S assignments from the IEEE to an entity that has paid an additional initial fee and/or an annual recurring fees to the IEEE to prevent their name and address from showing up in the public listing.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. Archives
March 2019
Categories |