You can just disable the wireless connection when you do not want to use it,
you do not need to unplug it. If you click Start > Control Panel > Network
Connections to show your system's network connection's you can drag your
wireless and wired connections to your desktop and a shortcut will be
automatically created. You can then right-click the shortcut corresponding
to the adapter you wish to disable and select 'Disable' from the menu. When
finished you can then rightclick the shortcut and select 'Enable' from the
menu.
--
All the best,
Ryan Younger.
http://spaces.msn.com/members/wirelessnetworking/ - Ryan's Wireless
Networking Weblog
"Jeff" <> wrote in message
news:...
>I have a wireless home LAN that works fine through a router. Sometimes
>when I wish to backup my laptop to an external drive on a desktop, I use a
>cable connection from the laptop to the router and then to the desktop. I
>do this because the backup is much faster and less error prone than if I
>did it over the wlan. Both computers are using XP-SP2. I cannot connect the
>external hard drive directly to the laptop because the laptop is an old one
>with a slow USB1 port.
>
> Question:
> The laptop's wireless adapter is through a PC card adapter. When I connect
> the wired cable to the laptop, I usually need to first remove the adapter
> PC Card to ensure that the backup (using Acronis's True Image) uses the
> cabled connection and not the wireless. Is there an easier way to force
> the connection to go through the cable (or) through wireless connection? A
> desktop shortcut or macro I can click on?
>
> Thank you.
>
> Jeff
>