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Wireless Networking - d600 can see network, can't connect |
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#1 |
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My laptop is identifying my home network, and says the signal is strong, but
also says I have "limited or no connectivity." (Or language close to that.) Until recently, I was having no problems connecting. It saw the network, I put in the WEP, and that was that. I did update the laptop with a service pack (if that's the phrase), which seems to coincide with the problem. I got advice elsewhere on this forum to try turning on the Extensible Authentication Protocol Service and the Network Access Protection Agent, but I don't know where to find these. CTS |
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#2 |
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Posts: n/a
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CTS said this on 1/2/2009 10:36 PM:
> My laptop is identifying my home network, and says the signal is strong, but > also says I have "limited or no connectivity." (Or language close to that.) > Until recently, I was having no problems connecting. It saw the network, I > put in the WEP, and that was that. I did update the laptop with a service > pack (if that's the phrase), which seems to coincide with the problem. > > I got advice elsewhere on this forum to try turning on the Extensible > Authentication Protocol Service and the Network Access Protection Agent, but > I don't know where to find these. Is this the only PC on the wireless? If so, try turning off security on the router and your PC. If you connect fine, then you know the basic hardware is good, radio and all. Then reapply the WEP or better yet WPA or WPA2. WEP is relatively unsecure. "Signal is strong" just means your close to the antenna of the router. "limited connectivity" probably means you didn't get past the security. Big_Al |
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#3 |
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Hi
From the weakest to the strongest, Wireless security capacity is. No Security MAC______(Band Aid if nothing else is available). WEP64____(Easy, to "Break" by knowledgeable people). WEP128___(A little Harder, but "Hackable" too). WPA-PSK__(Very Hard to Break). WPA-AES__(Not functionally Breakable) WPA2____ (Not functionally Breakable). Note 1: WPA-AES the the current entry level rendition of WPA2. Note 2: If you use WinXP and did not updated it you would have to download the WPA2 patch from Microsoft. http://support.microsoft.com/kb/893357 The documentation of your Wireless devices (Wireless Router, and Wireless Computer's Card) should state the type of security that is available with your Wireless hardware. All devices MUST be set to the same security level using the same pass phrase. Therefore the security must be set according what ever is the best possible of one of the Wireless devices. I.e. even if most of your system might be capable to be configured to the max. with WPA2, but one device is only capable to be configured to max . of WEP, to whole system must be configured to WEP. If you need more good security and one device (like a Wireless card that can do WEP only) is holding better security for the whole Network, replace the device with a better one. Setting Wireless Security - http://www.ezlan.net/Wireless_Security.html The Core differences between WEP, WPA, and WPA2 - http://www.ezlan.net/wpa_wep.html Jack (MVP-Networking). "CTS" <> wrote in message news:C734FEA5-DC71-48F0-8784-... > My laptop is identifying my home network, and says the signal is strong, > but > also says I have "limited or no connectivity." (Or language close to > that.) > Until recently, I was having no problems connecting. It saw the network, I > put in the WEP, and that was that. I did update the laptop with a service > pack (if that's the phrase), which seems to coincide with the problem. > > I got advice elsewhere on this forum to try turning on the Extensible > Authentication Protocol Service and the Network Access Protection Agent, > but > I don't know where to find these. Jack \(MVP-Networking\). |
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#4 |
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Okay, I'll try that. What does a Macintosh's "WPA Personal" translate to, in
Windows-ese? That appears to be the security setting I have. (Still working on this ...) "Big_Al" wrote: > CTS said this on 1/2/2009 10:36 PM: > > My laptop is identifying my home network, and says the signal is strong, but > > also says I have "limited or no connectivity." (Or language close to that.) > > Until recently, I was having no problems connecting. It saw the network, I > > put in the WEP, and that was that. I did update the laptop with a service > > pack (if that's the phrase), which seems to coincide with the problem. > > > > I got advice elsewhere on this forum to try turning on the Extensible > > Authentication Protocol Service and the Network Access Protection Agent, but > > I don't know where to find these. > > Is this the only PC on the wireless? If so, try turning off security > on the router and your PC. If you connect fine, then you know the > basic hardware is good, radio and all. Then reapply the WEP or better > yet WPA or WPA2. WEP is relatively unsecure. > > "Signal is strong" just means your close to the antenna of the router. > "limited connectivity" probably means you didn't get past the security. > > CTS |
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#5 |
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CTS said this on 1/3/2009 4:25 PM:
> Okay, I'll try that. What does a Macintosh's "WPA Personal" translate to, in > Windows-ese? That appears to be the security setting I have. (Still working > on this ...) > > "Big_Al" wrote: > >> CTS said this on 1/2/2009 10:36 PM: >>> My laptop is identifying my home network, and says the signal is strong, but >>> also says I have "limited or no connectivity." (Or language close to that.) >>> Until recently, I was having no problems connecting. It saw the network, I >>> put in the WEP, and that was that. I did update the laptop with a service >>> pack (if that's the phrase), which seems to coincide with the problem. >>> >>> I got advice elsewhere on this forum to try turning on the Extensible >>> Authentication Protocol Service and the Network Access Protection Agent, but >>> I don't know where to find these. >> Is this the only PC on the wireless? If so, try turning off security >> on the router and your PC. If you connect fine, then you know the >> basic hardware is good, radio and all. Then reapply the WEP or better >> yet WPA or WPA2. WEP is relatively unsecure. >> >> "Signal is strong" just means your close to the antenna of the router. >> "limited connectivity" probably means you didn't get past the security. >> >> I think its PSK. Google that phrase "wpa personal". EZLan is a good website for wireless info. Big_Al |
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#6 |
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CTS wrote:
> Okay, I'll try that. What does a Macintosh's "WPA Personal" translate to, in > Windows-ese? That appears to be the security setting I have. (Still working > on this ...) > It's not Windows-specific terminology. When you use WPA (or WPA2) the wifi adapter in your computer needs a "key" to decrypt ("unlock") the the encrypted messages sent from the router (and to lock/encrypt messages sent the other way). In a corporate environment, this key is usually obtained by your computer ("shared") from a special server that is part of the corporate IT system. In a home (or "personal") system, the key must be stored ("pre-shared") in your computer. Thus, WPA-Personal = WPA with a pre-shared key = WPA-PSK. -- Lem -- MS-MVP To the moon and back with 2K words of RAM and 36K words of ROM. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_Guidance_Computer http://history.nasa.gov/afj/compessay.htm Lem |
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