Originally Posted By: peter
Now whether the hash in question is standardised across manufacturers, that's anyone's guess; that'd be why they let you enter the 26 hex digits of the actual key instead.

On looking into it, in WPA/WPA2 (but apparently not WEP) the hash is standardised. So what you'd expect is that for WEP, Windows would expect 26 hex digits or an arbitrarily-long passphrase (the latter incompatible with non-Windows Wifi); for WPA or WPA2, 64 hex digits or a 64-character passphrase, compatible with anything. Either way it should show you the hex value it's actually using.

Peter