Friday,Jan22,

Wireless Network Hammerin '

The wireless network in my house went haywire. It worked on three PCs, one had a horrible connection, and you can not connect. Between Hubby and me, we spent a lot of time researching and trying to figure out, the problem. We narrowed the possibilities by using some tests. Hubby is the network king in our house and I learned a bit in collaboration with him. In fact, I solved the problem ... transient.

I believe, based on the wireless router is bad. It works well if we hook miles of cablehave it (I stumbled over them, knocked on things and chasing after a toddler who intervened.). I am of the view of the cable tired, so we are the manufacturer of your router in contact, as well as hunting for deals on a new wireless router with g (as in 802.11g).


Here are some of the tricks and troubleshooting tips I have learned in the game with the router:


Look how many computers can connect and how many are not. This tells you a story. If it is not all work, then the problemis likely to make the router itself. Perhaps we need a simple hard reset. Try a soft reset first (turning it off and on again). If that does not, can be a hard reset, according to the instructions for your router. Mine required holding the reset button pressed while you are off and on again and not let go until about a minute after switching on again.
If no computer wirelessly connect to the network, check to see if the router still works by connecting it with a cable. If it works here, you know,The router is still alive. It should not necessarily mean the wireless is dead. Of course, if your wireless router and not strictly double as my (cable and wireless), it will not work. Instead, you can test by bypassing the router and connect your LAN cable directly into the DSL / cable modem.
Do a little Pingin. It could be the ISP is down, and not a router problem. Open a command prompt (Start> Run> type "cmd"> then press Enter) and type "ipconfig / all" and you should get an answeragain with your IP address, subnet mask, default gateway, and other items. What you are looking for is the IP address of the "Default Gateway".

On the command line, type "ping xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx, where XXX = the numbers listed as the default gateway. For example, my default gateway address is 192.168.1.1, so I would type "ping 192.168.1.1" If you get a reply, then your router is working. Next, try a ping site. You do not need to know the IP address. You can ping web address.For example, type "ping http://www.marqui.com" and you should receive a response with the ping times from one IP address. The IP address is Marqui's. How did you know your computer? Due to the DNS (Domain Naming Service), but that's another story. If you can not ping site on the Internet, the problem is probably with your ISP.


Do you have a cordless phone? Some cordless phones to disconnect wireless connections while you use it. Stupid, but it happens. I have one that does exactly andothers who do not mess with it. Aggravating. I wanted the phone back, but it was a "no return" phone. If I had known it would be with the wireless, I would have never bought mess. So I've learned that the next time I buy a cell phone, check to see if the wireless or not to kill.
Ensure configuration is correct. Check the router manual to complete this step.
Try to change the channel. If that does not work, change the SSID (name known) and the channel. If your wireless' SSID"Wireless" and is on Channel 5 First, try changing the channel, 11 or something else as the 5th If that does not work, then you create a new SSID as "router" and select a channel, each channel. It never hurts to restart the router after each change, though, when to make changes, she sits down. This step is what our network is working again.

Is the process of change, depends on your router. For mine, all I had to do, will enter its IP address (200.200.1.1 for example) in the browserEnter the ID and password, and I'm in. It is similar to a software application or screen. Enter information, select the drop-a fields, and click buttons to change / save.

Another good thing to know when your mouse cursor over the wireless icon in the taskbar, point. It contains basic information about your wireless connection. It contains information about the SSID, speed and strength. The blacked out part in the picture is where the SSID is. Also to receive more information with the right mouse button on theIcon and select "View Available Wireless Network" or "Open Network Connections."
You may have turned on WEP. This saves others from using your wireless, because it requires a password. If it happens, make sure each PC is activated and the correct password or password.

This is a handful of what you can do. Other options are detailed and complex. But this is a good start and will contribute to a majority of opportunities.

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