On 29 Jul 2006 17:19:20 -0700 Dana <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
| 1) Set up all your connections with static IP's. "Obtain IP
| automatically" never seemed to keep us connected. The only fix was to
| UNPLUG the router to reset it several times a day. Don't know what the
| reset button is supposed to do!
If other things are not working, this certainly won't work. Normally
it should work fine. But if you're getting connected to other networks
maybe you're getting IPs from them, instead, and that could be part of
the problem. Do you have an SSID specified for every machine/device?
| 2) Going to the linksys configuration website 192.168.1.1, in the
| wireless security tab, enable MAC addressing. We then programmed in
| all the MAC addresses of the router, both LAN connections, and the
| wireless card (we got these "physical addresses" by going to each
| computer's DOS prompt and typing "ipconfig/all" according to my notes).
Doable. But that's the hard way.
| 3) For some reason, in the "wireless network connection properties"
| screen, if I click the "Use Windows to configure my connection" option,
| connectivity seems to go down hill. If I unclick it and allow the
| Linksys Wireless G software to handle everything, I have fewer
| problems.
They made a mistake when they typed in the lable for that option. It
should have read "Use Windows' brain dead concepts of networking to
misconfigure my connection". Windows is one system I have found that
explicit configuration is generally required.
--
|---------------------------------------/----------------------------------|
| Phil Howard KA9WGN (ka9wgn.ham.org) / Do not send to the address below |
| first name lower case at ipal.net /
spamtrap-2006-07-30-(E-Mail Removed) |
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