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date: Thu, 10 Jul 2008 17:17:36 +0100,
group: uk.comp.home-networking
back
A 'little' ad-hoc problem - HELP!
I have two wireless modem routers.
One is a Belkinn "ADSL Modem with Wireless-G Router", and the other is a
Linksys "Wireless-G ADSL Gateway WAG54GS with Speedbooster". Both work
perfectly well :-).
However, my wife has a "Vista home premium" machine, in her office
upstairs. A "Belkin G USB Network Adapter" worked fine to keep her
conneceted to our home network and, more importantly, to the Internet.
Suddenly it stopped working, and suspicion fell on Vista SP1 and its effect
on USB operations. Now I've even tried to a Procomm device. NO LUCK:-(.
It has occurred to me that the two routers, which don't use USB, could be
used to connect her to the network, by talking to eachother as it were. I
keep reading things about having to
set her's up in 'client' mode, and creating an 'ad-hoc' connection..
However, neither router mentions such abstruce terms.
Can anyone point me in the right direction here? I'd be ever so grateful.
I'm tired of struggling with this problem. Ethernet cable is undesirable,
and I'm not sure I want to purchase the hardware which works via the power
cables.
Yours in advance
GPG
date: Thu, 10 Jul 2008 17:17:36 +0100
author: GPG
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Re: A 'little' ad-hoc problem - HELP!
On Thu, 10 Jul 2008 17:17:36 +0100, GPG passed an empty day by writing:
> I have two wireless modem routers.
>
> One is a Belkinn "ADSL Modem with Wireless-G Router", and the other is a
> Linksys "Wireless-G ADSL Gateway WAG54GS with Speedbooster". Both work
> perfectly well :-).
>
> However, my wife has a "Vista home premium" machine, in her office
> upstairs. A "Belkin G USB Network Adapter" worked fine to keep her
> conneceted to our home network and, more importantly, to the Internet.
> Suddenly it stopped working, and suspicion fell on Vista SP1 and its
> effect on USB operations. Now I've even tried to a Procomm device. NO
> LUCK:-(.
>
> It has occurred to me that the two routers, which don't use USB, could
> be used to connect her to the network, by talking to eachother as it
> were. I keep reading things about having to
> set her's up in 'client' mode, and creating an 'ad-hoc' connection..
> However, neither router mentions such abstruce terms.
>
> Can anyone point me in the right direction here? I'd be ever so
> grateful. I'm tired of struggling with this problem. Ethernet cable is
> undesirable, and I'm not sure I want to purchase the hardware which
> works via the power cables.
>
> Yours in advance
>
> GPG
It may be off message, but I got this today:
"Many customers may be experiencing issues connecting to the internet. We
believe this is due to a recent Windows update which can conflict with
some security software. Customers unable to browse the internet should
try disabling their firewall and antivirus software temporarily."
--
begin oefixed_in_2005.exe
date: 10 Jul 2008 17:50:07 GMT
author: Klunk
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Re: A 'little' ad-hoc problem - HELP!
"Klunk" wrote in message
news:48764bcf$0$2519$da0feed9@news.zen.co.uk...
> On Thu, 10 Jul 2008 17:17:36 +0100, GPG passed an empty day by writing:
>
>> I have two wireless modem routers.
>>
>> One is a Belkinn "ADSL Modem with Wireless-G Router", and the other is a
>> Linksys "Wireless-G ADSL Gateway WAG54GS with Speedbooster". Both work
>> perfectly well :-).
>>
>> However, my wife has a "Vista home premium" machine, in her office
>> upstairs. A "Belkin G USB Network Adapter" worked fine to keep her
>> conneceted to our home network and, more importantly, to the Internet.
>> Suddenly it stopped working, and suspicion fell on Vista SP1 and its
>> effect on USB operations. Now I've even tried to a Procomm device. NO
>> LUCK:-(.
>>
>> It has occurred to me that the two routers, which don't use USB, could
>> be used to connect her to the network, by talking to eachother as it
>> were. I keep reading things about having to
>> set her's up in 'client' mode, and creating an 'ad-hoc' connection..
>> However, neither router mentions such abstruce terms.
>>
>> Can anyone point me in the right direction here? I'd be ever so
>> grateful. I'm tired of struggling with this problem. Ethernet cable is
>> undesirable, and I'm not sure I want to purchase the hardware which
>> works via the power cables.
>>
>> Yours in advance
>>
>> GPG
>
> It may be off message, but I got this today:
>
> "Many customers may be experiencing issues connecting to the internet. We
> believe this is due to a recent Windows update which can conflict with
> some security software. Customers unable to browse the internet should
> try disabling their firewall and antivirus software temporarily."
>
> --
BAD ADVICE! Do not install the latest security update. It took a UK wide
network down toda at work. I also had to do a system restore to get my own
PCs working. Thanks Microsoft.
date: Fri, 11 Jul 2008 00:30:43 +0100
author: Paul P
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Re: A 'little' ad-hoc problem - HELP!
On Thu, 10 Jul 2008 17:17:36 +0100
"GPG" wrote:
> I have two wireless modem routers.
>
> One is a Belkinn "ADSL Modem with Wireless-G Router", and the other
> is a Linksys "Wireless-G ADSL Gateway WAG54GS with Speedbooster".
> Both work perfectly well :-).
>
> However, my wife has a "Vista home premium" machine, in her office
> upstairs. A "Belkin G USB Network Adapter" worked fine to keep her
> conneceted to our home network and, more importantly, to the Internet.
> Suddenly it stopped working, and suspicion fell on Vista SP1 and its
> effect on USB operations. Now I've even tried to a Procomm device.
> NO LUCK:-(.
>
> It has occurred to me that the two routers, which don't use USB,
> could be used to connect her to the network, by talking to eachother
> as it were. I keep reading things about having to
> set her's up in 'client' mode, and creating an 'ad-hoc' connection..
> However, neither router mentions such abstruce terms.
>
> Can anyone point me in the right direction here? I'd be ever so
> grateful. I'm tired of struggling with this problem. Ethernet cable
> is undesirable, and I'm not sure I want to purchase the hardware
> which works via the power cables.
>
Some routers can be run in wireless client mode by loading custom
firmware called DD-WRT, but the WAG54GS doesn't seem to be one of
them. I haven't a clue about the Belkin. Are you sure it's a USB
problem and not a network problem?
date: Fri, 11 Jul 2008 02:51:02 +0100
author: Rob Morley
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Re: A 'little' ad-hoc problem - HELP!
In message <g5663a$mkp$1@news.albasani.net>, Paul P
writes
>BAD ADVICE! Do not install the latest security update. It took a UK wide
>network down toda at work. I also had to do a system restore to get my own
>PCs working. Thanks Microsoft.
Fools rush in...
>
>
--
Bill.
date: Wed, 16 Jul 2008 19:13:38 +0100
author: Clint Sharp
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