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elduderino
April 5th, 2004, 12:04 PM
Hi
My neighbor has XP Pro on a desktop, with a broadband cable internet connection, and a Laptop with XP home, and built in wireless adapter.
He has a D-Link DI514 4 port wireless router into which the NTL cable connection is plugged, then the desktop with an ethernet card is connected (wired) to one of the ports on the router.
He is able to access the internet with the Desktop,but cannot access the laptop.
The laptop cannot access either the internet or the Desktop, but the laptop wireless connection informs him that the connection is excellent,
Hope this makes sense
Thanks for any help on this
NooNoo
April 5th, 2004, 12:21 PM
Sounds like the desktop has a firewall enabled (xp comes with one) and/or the router is treating the laptop as not a trusted ip. Is wep, wpa or mac filtering enabled on the router?
jwhart
April 5th, 2004, 09:01 PM
Try resetting the router back to its default settings with no wep or anything just to see if you can connect. If you can be sure to re-enable the security settings.
elduderino
April 6th, 2004, 10:54 AM
Hi
Thanks for the replies.
I have been able to narrow it down to the WEP settings, if i disable them i can connect, if i enable them there is no connection.
Seeing that encryption is important, it needs to get sorted out.
Can anyone help on this please
Gollo
April 6th, 2004, 05:29 PM
Hi
Thanks for the replies.
I have been able to narrow it down to the WEP settings, if i disable them i can connect, if i enable them there is no connection.
Seeing that encryption is important, it needs to get sorted out.
Can anyone help on this please
Are the adapter and access point the same brand?
All's I can think is that you have an ascii based wep key on one and a hex key on the other. Even if they are generated and look the same some adapters don't play well.
As for encryption being important: it can go either way.
Depending on the use of the system (home based use, lite file sharing, web surfing/downloading vrs. bank transactions). For home based stuff I suggest mac filtering and turning off ssid broadcast. This will prevent most people from connecting to your network. Now if it were a business and sensitive data was being transmitted over wireless I wouldn't even recommend wep. I would go with a vpn as it is a lot more secure. Anyways just my 0.02 Cheers.
jwhart
April 7th, 2004, 10:53 AM
Not to insult you, but are the WEP settings in the router the same as on the cards you're using. As you know if 1 thing is different no connection.
Shep926
April 7th, 2004, 05:53 PM
http://www.dlink.com/products/support.asp?pid=226#manual
Everything you need to know is here
Shep