At wit's end -- connection but not connected. |
playmyj50yahooco posted on Friday, March 09, 2007 11:41 AM
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Hi. Perhaps someone can help me with this.
My son is trying to connect to his mom's wireless network. When he is at my
house, he uses a Msoft MN-520 (?) PCMCIA card to connect to my wireless
network (MN 620?) and everything is fine. At his mom's house, she has a
Linksys wireless base station, but although his laptop sees the connection
and reports that he is connected, he can't access the Internet or e-mail or
anything else. I just talked to his brother, who has his own laptop, and he
was able to find and connect with the base station, so I know the router and
base station are working. And I know the PCMCIA card is working in the first
laptop because he can connect to my network when here.
I have tried everything I can think of, including turning on and off the
zero config service, setting up the network connection again -- but no luck.
What am I missing? Suggestions? The laptop says he is connected and the
signal strength is good, but that's as far as we can get. His laptop is a
Dell 5150 with a wireless card, as I said, and his brother's laptop is a
Lenovo with built-in wireless. |
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At wit's end -- connection but not connected. |
Lem posted on Friday, March 09, 2007 1:29 PM
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In the world of Windows XP wireless, "Connected" does not really mean
connected, and "good signal strength" does not mean that you actually
have a good signal. See, e.g., http://www.ezlan.net/wbars.html
Because your son can connect to your wifi access point, the issue is
unlikely to be a firewall on his laptop. More likely, this problem is
caused by some security setting on Mom's router. When your son "Views
available wireless networks" does Mom's network show as "secured" or
If the network uses WEP encryption (it really should use WPA or WPA2),
then he needs to enter the HEX encryption key and not the "password"
that was used in the router to generate the HEX key. In addition to
encryption, the network may have been set up to permit only specific
clients, by MAC address. In this case, the router has to be configured
to permit his computer to connect.
If Mom set up her own wireless network, then she will know the answers
to the above. If not, your son may have to get her permission to access
the router's configuration pages to get the hex encryption key and/or
add his MAC address to the list of permitted clients.
--
Lem MS MVP -- Networking
To the moon and back with 64 Kbits of RAM and 512 Kbits of ROM.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_Guidance_Computer |
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I don't think it's a matter of permission, given the fact that he has the |
playmyj50yahooco posted on Monday, March 12, 2007 10:20 AM
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I don't think it's a matter of permission, given the fact that he has the
access code and has entered it correctly in his laptop.
I suspect that the Msoft card is incompatible with the Linksys router, for
whatever reason. The card is "b" and the network is "g." That ought not to be
a problem, but in the world of computers just about everything that can be a
a problem sooner or later becomes one,
Anyway, he's sitting there with a $1200 paperweight. And I am pretty much
out of ideas. |
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At wit's end -- connection but not connected. |
Diamontina Cocktail posted on Monday, March 12, 2007 3:35 PM
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Not possible if both of those things are built to the standards. The problem
is access at the software level. I had this problem. I had ZA Pro installed
but not started and Vista working. ZA Pro didnt work with Vista so had to be
uninstalled and all OK. |
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At wit's end -- connection but not connected. |
Lem posted on Monday, March 12, 2007 10:10 PM
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I don't think you mentioned the b/g discrepancy before. Make sure that
the router is not set to "g only." 802.11G is backwards compatible with
802.11B, but often wireless G routers can be configured to be either
802.11G, gave better performance).
--
Lem -- MS-MVP - Networking
To the moon and back with 64 Kbits of RAM and 512 Kbits of ROM.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_Guidance_Computer |
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