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At present I am on Dial-up and want to get on to BB. I know I can receive it
all right, but when my local exchange was enabled last year, I tried to get established and had so much trouble with the supplied USB modem installation (system freezes and so on) that I took fright and cancelled the whole thing. I have two machines, one upstairs (about 10-15 metres in a straight line) which I would want to share the BB connection. What I would like is some kind of router which I could use for dial-up until I'm ready to go on BB and then could connect the two machines wirelessly and share a printer and so on. Any suggestions? Regards and thanks in advance P J Macguire Syke |
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#2
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On Sat, 28 May 2005 09:50:04 +0100, "Syke" <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote: >What I would like is some kind of router which I could use for dial-up until >I'm ready to go on BB and then could connect the two machines wirelessly and >share a printer and so on. souns like making work for works sake. Just get on and get a combined ADSL modem/router wireless thing and do it properly. £50 from Tesco :-) integrating a dialup connection into it is going to take effort and is non-trivial. Forget it. Phil -- Tiscali - dialup speeds at Broadband prices, see http://bbs.adslguide.org.uk/postlist...&Board=tiscali AOL - the unlimited ISP of choice for heavy downloaders. |
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#3
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On 28 May 2005 09:50, "Syke" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>What I would like is some kind of router which I could use for dial-up until >I'm ready to go on BB and then could connect the two machines wirelessly and >share a printer and so on. Aaargh! Why bother to wait ? Why even think about sticking with dial-up for another month let alone 6 :-) As you're after wireless, there are lots of reviews on the ADSLguide.org site. For sharing, you would do well to ask here or in uk.comp.home-networking if you haven't done this before (watch out for some new printer which has drivers only for Win XP, but the second PC is running Win 98SE or something, as sharing will be awkward/impossible) Finally, whatever else you do, get a cable and use an ethernet card for the PC near the router... setting it up over wireless (and possibly locking it out if you make some security change) will mean you'll need the cable, and with only one PC using wireless they will not 'compete' with one another to access the router. Anyway, you'll have lots more to enjoy once you have a bit more (a LOT more) speed (based on 40+ months with ADSL). Peter M. [ Almost forgot - there was mention of a combined ADSL modem/router and 56k dial-up modem from Aldi recently. Have only seen people having probs, so that's best avoided... or worth researching to double check first. ] -- Plus.Net <http://tinyurl.com/5jpa4> I recommend them and save some cash. |
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#4
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"Peter M" <us-(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:9ikg915cu3c7u1oau51kf68h29h5gs097d@212.159.2. 86... > On 28 May 2005 09:50, "Syke" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote: > > >What I would like is some kind of router which I could use for dial-up until > >I'm ready to go on BB and then could connect the two machines wirelessly and > >share a printer and so on. > > Aaargh! Why bother to wait ? Why even think about sticking with dial-up for > another month let alone 6 :-) As you're after wireless, there are lots of > reviews on the ADSLguide.org site. For sharing, you would do well to ask > here or in uk.comp.home-networking if you haven't done this before (watch > out for some new printer which has drivers only for Win XP, but the second > PC is running Win 98SE or something, as sharing will be awkward/impossible) > > Finally, whatever else you do, get a cable and use an ethernet card for the > PC near the router... setting it up over wireless (and possibly locking it > out if you make some security change) will mean you'll need the cable, and > with only one PC using wireless they will not 'compete' with one another to > access the router. Anyway, you'll have lots more to enjoy once you have a > bit more (a LOT more) speed (based on 40+ months with ADSL). Peter M. > > [ Almost forgot - there was mention of a combined ADSL modem/router and 56k > dial-up modem from Aldi recently. Have only seen people having probs, so > that's best avoided... or worth researching to double check first. ] > > -- > Plus.Net <http://tinyurl.com/5jpa4> > I recommend them and save some cash. Thanks for that but how would I manage with access to dial-up, for backup service if BB is down? Regards P J Macguire |
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#5
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>> >What I would like is some kind of router which I could use for dial-up >until > >Thanks for that but how would I manage with access to dial-up, for backup >service if BB is down? > > It sounds as though your overcomplicating things in your mind. Obviously you are on the internet now - hence your message. It is acceptable to leave the current modem in your PC as well as the proposed Broadband Hardware. When using Broadband the connecting cable goes into the ADSL slot on the filter - to go back to 56k modem usage you simply swithch from the ADSL cable and insert the normal phone line cable as at present. KM |
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#6
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<snip>
> > Thanks for that but how would I manage with access to dial-up, for backup > service if BB is down? > > Why do you think it will be "down" at all. BB connections can even keep working when you have a line fault. You seem to be looking back at your past failings and finding a more complicated and costly alternative so if you still have problems setting up your network you can have something to blame. Just get a ADSL Modem/Router wth 54G wireless, FOLLOW the setup guide its supplied and enable security on the Wireless. then setup the PCs making sure you use DHCP and you should have no problems. BB is only as complicated as you want to make it. Ian |
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#7
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On Sat, 28 May 2005 13:19:30 +0100, "Syke" <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote: >Thanks for that but how would I manage with access to dial-up, for backup >service if BB is down? By a modem? They are dirt cheap ATM. -- Cheers, Guy ** Stress - the condition brought about by having to ** resist the temptation to beat the living daylights ** out of someone who richly deserves it. |
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#8
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On Sat, 28 May 2005 15:51:12 +0100, Dr Teeth
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote: >By a modem? Oopsie: 'Buy a modem'. -- Cheers, Guy ** Stress - the condition brought about by having to ** resist the temptation to beat the living daylights ** out of someone who richly deserves it. |
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#9
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On 28 May 2005 15:51, Dr Teeth <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>On 28 May 2005 13:19, "Syke" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote: >>Thanks for that but how would I manage with access to dial-up, for backup >>service if BB is down? >By a modem? >They are dirt cheap ATM. Uh, no need to buy one as he's already using one. I cannot remember just where the 56k modems are (I went to a router for ISDN in 2001, and to BB in 2002 and haven't needed to dial up any of the ADSL service providers in the past 40+ months. When visiting the neighbour of a friend to be able to help her get online with dial-up it was shocking how slow and painful it was both to get connected and do anything online... PGM. -- Plus.Net <http://tinyurl.com/5jpa4> I recommend them and save some cash. |
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#10
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Syke wrote:
> At present I am on Dial-up and want to get on to BB. I know I can receive it > all right, but when my local exchange was enabled last year, I tried to get > established and had so much trouble with the supplied USB modem installation > (system freezes and so on) that I took fright and cancelled the whole thing. > I have two machines, one upstairs (about 10-15 metres in a straight line) > which I would want to share the BB connection. > > What I would like is some kind of router which I could use for dial-up until > I'm ready to go on BB and then could connect the two machines wirelessly and > share a printer and so on. > > Any suggestions? > > > Regards and thanks in advance > > > P J Macguire > > In all probability, your previous bad experience, with system hangs etc, was due to bad drivers or a system that couldn't support the supplied ADSL modem (which if was the Alcatel "frog" wouldn't be surprising, since many systems didn't have the required chipset/power availability to run the modem). ADSL is stable as far as my experience goes - over two years with 2 outages, both of less than a few hours, with BT broadband. Just re-order and buy an ADSL modem/router. You always have the option of plugging in the old modem if you lose ADSL (which is unlikely). -- Regards, Danny http://www.gaggia-espresso.com (a purely hobby site) http://www.dannyscoffee.com (UK advert for my mobile espresso service) http://www.malabargold.co.uk (UK/European online ordering for Malabar Gold blend) swap Z for above characters in email address to reply |
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