BTW, if your router is still broadcasting the SSID when you turn it off, then you have a faulty router. Mine does not show up at all and I had to tell it the network was there.
Every so often someone argues this point until they prove it to themselves. Download and install
KisMAC. Ensure that your base station is set so that it does not broadcast the SSID. Ensure that another wireless computer is accessing the base station. Operate KisMAC in passive mode. You will see the network name used by your base station appear on the list of detected networks within a few seconds.
Secondly, if I set the router to only allow certain MAC addresses and you, the outsider don't know which ones that I have allowed, you can try to spoof them all day long.
I'll restate the information. Any outsider merely needs to intercept the traffic between a connected client and the base station. Then they will have the MAC address of that client. Since that client is talking to the base station, that client is on the "allowed" MAC list. Now the outsider merely has to configure his machine to clone that MAC address and the outsider is attached to your network.
Several years ago it was believed that these items added security. That is probably when the article on practicallynetworked was written. In today's world neither add security.
If they make you feel better, use them. But they offer no more protection than putting a sheet over your base station. It's kind of like when young children cover their eyes and believe that they are invisible. It just ain't so... no matter how hard you believe it.