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I've searched the internet fruitlessly trying to find an answer to
what should be a simple question, given that this is probably one of the most common things that people do with a computer. I have 1. A new laptop running Vissta 2. A DSL connection to a 2wire 2700 modem/router 3. A desktop hardwied to the modem router. I want have a wireless connection to the laptop. I gave 1. Run through connect to the internet dialog and see a connection to "2WIRE387." 2. Click it and the it asks for a "secuirity key or passphrase." I have no idea what it wants and there is no explanation anywhere. I would appreciate information. |
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On Jun 3, 8:56 am, wrote:
I've searched the internet fruitlessly trying to find an answer to what should be a simple question, given that this is probably one of the most common things that people do with a computer. I have 1. A new laptop running Vissta 2. A DSL connection to a 2wire 2700 modem/router 3. A desktop hardwied to the modem router. I want have a wireless connection to the laptop. I gave 1. Run through connect to the internet dialog and see a connection to "2WIRE387." 2. Click it and the it asks for a "secuirity key or passphrase." I have no idea what it wants and there is no explanation anywhere. I would appreciate information. I have discovered an application called "Think Pad Access Connection." I assume this has something to do with it. When I try to set up a network, it says that there is no signal. But wait a second, doesn;tthe 2Wire 2700 send out a signal? A better question is "How is anyone supposed to sort through the complexities of Vista, 'Think Pad Access Connection,' DSL connections and 2Wire modem/routers and figure out how to do anything?" |
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On Jun 3, 9:57 am, Malke wrote:
wrote: On Jun 3, 8:56 am, wrote: I've searched the internet fruitlessly trying to find an answer to what should be a simple question, given that this is probably one of the most common things that people do with a computer. I have 1. A new laptop running Vissta 2. A DSL connection to a 2wire 2700 modem/router 3. A desktop hardwied to the modem router. I want have a wireless connection to the laptop. I gave 1. Run through connect to the internet dialog and see a connection to "2WIRE387." 2. Click it and the it asks for a "secuirity key or passphrase." I have no idea what it wants and there is no explanation anywhere. I would appreciate information. I have discovered an application called "Think Pad Access Connection." I assume this has something to do with it. When I try to set up a network, it says that there is no signal. But wait a second, doesn;tthe 2Wire 2700 send out a signal? A better question is "How is anyone supposed to sort through the complexities of Vista, 'Think Pad Access Connection,' DSL connections and 2Wire modem/routers and figure out how to do anything?" This is very simple and you're approaching it from the wrong end (the computer instead of the router). This has nothing to do with Vista and everything to do with not reading the setup instructions that came with your 2Wire. ;-) 1. Go to the desktop wired to the 2Wire. Do: StartRuncmd [enter] ipconfig /all [enter] Write down the Gateway IP address. This will be something like 192.168.0.254 or 192.168.1.1. This is your 2Wire's address. Close out of cmd. 2. Still on the desktop, open a browser (IE, Firefox) and in the addressbar type: http://192.168.0.254[enter] You will substitute whatever the correct Gateway IP address is that you found by doing ipconfig in Step 1. 3. Now you will be presented with the router's configuration utility. Enter the username and password. Look in the router's setup manual for the default username and password - the password is usually the serial number on the bottom of the router but it may be different in your case and I don't remember the default username offhand. The 2Wire help will tell you. 4. Once you've done that and are in, go to the router's wireless settings. Change the SSID from the default to something you will recognize. I prefer that clients not use their family name but this is your choice. My own SSID is "darktower" to give you an idea of what I mean. 5. Still in the router's configuration utility, go to the wireless security and set it to WPA-PSK with TKIP encryption. Your 2Wire may have WPA2 or WPA-Personal instead and that's fine. Enter a passphrase and write it down. An example of a passphrase is (without the quotes) "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower came". Save all the router settings changes you made. The router will reboot and then you're done there. 6. Now go to your wireless laptop. It will see your wireless network - you'll see the SSID you gave it. It will ask you to enter the encryption key or passphrase. Enter the passphrase you chose so it matches the one on the router. You're now done. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computerswww.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User I love it when people say that it is very simple. Of course it's always simple when you know the answer. Well, I wasted another 3 hours and it still doesn't work. The laptop can find the network but will not connect. The great diagnostic utility is real helpful - it says "reason unknown." I assume the problem is in security but nothing you've said fits what the software is asking for. It gives 4 security types, Static Wep Key Wifi protected access IEEE 802.1 authentificication. If I select WEP, none of the required number of digits is not the same as on the number of digits on the bottom of the modem. I tried connecting with encryption disabled and it still does connect. Yeah, it's real simple. So far, I've wasted over 8 hours on this and am not closer to than when I started. |
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wrote:
I love it when people say that it is very simple. Of course it's always simple when you know the answer. Well, I wasted another 3 hours and it still doesn't work. The laptop can find the network but will not connect. The great diagnostic utility is real helpful - it says "reason unknown." I assume the problem is in security but nothing you've said fits what the software is asking for. It gives 4 security types, Static Wep Key Wifi protected access IEEE 802.1 authentificication. If I select WEP, none of the required number of digits is not the same as on the number of digits on the bottom of the modem. I tried connecting with encryption disabled and it still does connect. Yeah, it's real simple. So far, I've wasted over 8 hours on this and am not closer to than when I started. Since you said this is a new laptop, I assumed it can do WPA2. Contact Lenovo tech support for why your Thinkpad won't allow you to contact to a WPA-encrypted network. You might also want to check with 2Wire tech support to make sure your 2Wire can do WPA. If it is a very old 2Wire, it may not and you should replace it. Yes, it may be very simple to fix your issues but impossible for someone who can't see your computers and equipment. Since you've already spent so much time on this, a better course of action might be to have a local professional come on-site and set you up. Someone who can see your computers and has an understanding of what they are seeing will have a much better chance of fixing the issue than someone only reading about this in a newsgroup. I'm sorry my suggestions did not help you and I'm sorry that I have no further help for you. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
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Maybe if you try wpa/tkip in the set-up for the wireless connection.
Ko. schreef in bericht oups.com... On Jun 3, 9:57 am, Malke wrote: wrote: On Jun 3, 8:56 am, wrote: I've searched the internet fruitlessly trying to find an answer to what should be a simple question, given that this is probably one of the most common things that people do with a computer. I have 1. A new laptop running Vissta 2. A DSL connection to a 2wire 2700 modem/router 3. A desktop hardwied to the modem router. I want have a wireless connection to the laptop. I gave 1. Run through connect to the internet dialog and see a connection to "2WIRE387." 2. Click it and the it asks for a "secuirity key or passphrase." I have no idea what it wants and there is no explanation anywhere. I would appreciate information. I have discovered an application called "Think Pad Access Connection." I assume this has something to do with it. When I try to set up a network, it says that there is no signal. But wait a second, doesn;tthe 2Wire 2700 send out a signal? A better question is "How is anyone supposed to sort through the complexities of Vista, 'Think Pad Access Connection,' DSL connections and 2Wire modem/routers and figure out how to do anything?" This is very simple and you're approaching it from the wrong end (the computer instead of the router). This has nothing to do with Vista and everything to do with not reading the setup instructions that came with your 2Wire. ;-) 1. Go to the desktop wired to the 2Wire. Do: StartRuncmd [enter] ipconfig /all [enter] Write down the Gateway IP address. This will be something like 192.168.0.254 or 192.168.1.1. This is your 2Wire's address. Close out of cmd. 2. Still on the desktop, open a browser (IE, Firefox) and in the addressbar type: http://192.168.0.254[enter] You will substitute whatever the correct Gateway IP address is that you found by doing ipconfig in Step 1. 3. Now you will be presented with the router's configuration utility. Enter the username and password. Look in the router's setup manual for the default username and password - the password is usually the serial number on the bottom of the router but it may be different in your case and I don't remember the default username offhand. The 2Wire help will tell you. 4. Once you've done that and are in, go to the router's wireless settings. Change the SSID from the default to something you will recognize. I prefer that clients not use their family name but this is your choice. My own SSID is "darktower" to give you an idea of what I mean. 5. Still in the router's configuration utility, go to the wireless security and set it to WPA-PSK with TKIP encryption. Your 2Wire may have WPA2 or WPA-Personal instead and that's fine. Enter a passphrase and write it down. An example of a passphrase is (without the quotes) "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower came". Save all the router settings changes you made. The router will reboot and then you're done there. 6. Now go to your wireless laptop. It will see your wireless network - you'll see the SSID you gave it. It will ask you to enter the encryption key or passphrase. Enter the passphrase you chose so it matches the one on the router. You're now done. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computerswww.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User I love it when people say that it is very simple. Of course it's always simple when you know the answer. Well, I wasted another 3 hours and it still doesn't work. The laptop can find the network but will not connect. The great diagnostic utility is real helpful - it says "reason unknown." I assume the problem is in security but nothing you've said fits what the software is asking for. It gives 4 security types, Static Wep Key Wifi protected access IEEE 802.1 authentificication. If I select WEP, none of the required number of digits is not the same as on the number of digits on the bottom of the modem. I tried connecting with encryption disabled and it still does connect. Yeah, it's real simple. So far, I've wasted over 8 hours on this and am not closer to than when I started. |
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Hi Robert. Are you trying to connect to an existing network or are you
setting up a network? If it's an existing network, the network has security enabled so you need to supply the key or passphrase in order to connect. If you didn't set up this network, ask the person who did. If you are just now setting up the network, here's a Help topic about security keys: http://windowshelp.microsoft.com/Win...25fcb1033.mspx Thanks, -- Gloria Boyer Windows User Assistance team Microsoft Corporation |