Like Barb said, the hardware is supposed to be on continuously, and thus you
avoid the "restart" sequence. I can only think of twice (maybe three times)
that I've shut off my Fujitsu SpeedPort DSL modem (furnished by Verizon) in
about three years.
What happens when you shut the stuff down is the modem needs to talk to your
ISP, identifying itself and receiving the proper feed, then the base station
needs to do the same though the modem, and, lastly, then the computer needs
to do its little greetings to the base station.
In dial-up, remember back to the "handshake" signal we could hear while
dialing. About the same thing is going on between each of the hardware
devices. If you don't wish to leave the base station on, then you're going
to have that delay each time.
--
Chris H.
Microsoft Windows MVP
Associate Expert
Expert Zone -
www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/expertzone
"Steve" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:07bf01c3d9fa$b96bd890$(E-Mail Removed)...
> I have Verizon DSL coming into a Westell modem which in
> turn is connected to a Microsoft MN-700 wireless base
> station (router). The problem is that unless the modem is
> turned on and allowed to cycle up to a connection before
> I turn on the MN-700, I cannot connect to the internet
> through the MN-700. This is a problem because I have all
> my equipment on the same power strip, so everything comes
> on at the same time. Is there a way to fix the
> connectivity issue with the MN-700, or is this common for
> all routers? Thanks!!