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New to the home pc, so I have several questions to make sure I am setting
things up properly. I have a Sony Vaio with Vista. It came with built in wireless. - Other than price, what is the difference between Linksys Wireless-G and Linksys Wireless-N? - I've heard that the location of the router can make a large difference in connectivity. Is there a recommended location? - What is an "access point"? What is is used for? How does it work in relation to a router? - How can I setup the wireless router so that only my laptop(s) will be able to connect? - I am looking at getting a printer as well. How does that work with a router? Do I need to get a wireless printer, or can I somehow connect a printer to a wireless router so that more than one pc can print to the printer. Thanks in advance for any assistance. |
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Hello vermin93,
see inline Best regards Meinolf Weber Disclaimer: This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. New to the home pc, so I have several questions to make sure I am setting things up properly. I have a Sony Vaio with Vista. It came with built in wireless. - Other than price, what is the difference between Linksys Wireless-G and Linksys Wireless-N? This is not Linksys this is Microsoft NG, please post there and read your manual - I've heard that the location of the router can make a large difference in connectivity. Is there a recommended location? Nereby the computer is always the best. - What is an "access point"? What is is used for? How does it work in relation to a router? A connectivity device to prolonge the distance to the router. - How can I setup the wireless router so that only my laptop(s) will be able to connect? This is not Linksys this is Microsoft NG, please post there and read your manual - I am looking at getting a printer as well. How does that work with a router? Do I need to get a wireless printer, or can I somehow connect a printer to a wireless router so that more than one pc can print to the printer. This is not Linksys this is Microsoft NG, please post there and read your manual. Also you can look in the manual for network printer configuration. Thanks in advance for any assistance. |
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1 draft N is fast and covers more distance than G 2 most definitely. you want to avoid walls, ceilings, duct work, furniture, large appliances, mirrors, etc. a lot depends on the building materials used in your location as well. 3. wireless routers have an embedded access point. you can also purchase a stand alone access points and in many cases you can change a router into an access point. a wireless router will handle protecting you from the nasties on the Internet, provide wired and wireless access in a single box. 4. You should use WPA2 for wireless security and not give the passphrase to anyone else. 5. some printers include wifi networking. you can purchase a wireless print server as an add on. you can also purchase printers with built in ethernet that you can connect to a port on your router. On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 06:50:01 -0700, vermin93 wrote: New to the home pc, so I have several questions to make sure I am setting things up properly. I have a Sony Vaio with Vista. It came with built in wireless. - Other than price, what is the difference between Linksys Wireless-G and Linksys Wireless-N? - I've heard that the location of the router can make a large difference in connectivity. Is there a recommended location? - What is an "access point"? What is is used for? How does it work in relation to a router? - How can I setup the wireless router so that only my laptop(s) will be able to connect? - I am looking at getting a printer as well. How does that work with a router? Do I need to get a wireless printer, or can I somehow connect a printer to a wireless router so that more than one pc can print to the printer. Thanks in advance for any assistance. -- Barb Bowman MS Windows-MVP http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ |
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Great info! Thank you, Barb.
Follow-up question: Does either the Linksys G or the Linksys N "play nice" with Vista more so than the other? Seems like I've been seeing a lot of wireless connectivity challenges with Vista, but I do not (yet) have the depth of knowledge to follow all that is being said. Thanks again! "Barb Bowman" wrote: 1 draft N is fast and covers more distance than G 2 most definitely. you want to avoid walls, ceilings, duct work, furniture, large appliances, mirrors, etc. a lot depends on the building materials used in your location as well. 3. wireless routers have an embedded access point. you can also purchase a stand alone access points and in many cases you can change a router into an access point. a wireless router will handle protecting you from the nasties on the Internet, provide wired and wireless access in a single box. 4. You should use WPA2 for wireless security and not give the passphrase to anyone else. 5. some printers include wifi networking. you can purchase a wireless print server as an add on. you can also purchase printers with built in ethernet that you can connect to a port on your router. On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 06:50:01 -0700, vermin93 wrote: New to the home pc, so I have several questions to make sure I am setting things up properly. I have a Sony Vaio with Vista. It came with built in wireless. - Other than price, what is the difference between Linksys Wireless-G and Linksys Wireless-N? - I've heard that the location of the router can make a large difference in connectivity. Is there a recommended location? - What is an "access point"? What is is used for? How does it work in relation to a router? - How can I setup the wireless router so that only my laptop(s) will be able to connect? - I am looking at getting a printer as well. How does that work with a router? Do I need to get a wireless printer, or can I somehow connect a printer to a wireless router so that more than one pc can print to the printer. Thanks in advance for any assistance. -- Barb Bowman MS Windows-MVP http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ |
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Anything on
http://winqual.microsoft.com/HCL/Pro...=v&cid=712&g=d *should* work fine. I am using a D-Link DIR 655 Draft N router that works beautifully with Vista. In fact, I just wrote about it: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx/kb/933872 On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 10:28:00 -0700, vermin93 wrote: Great info! Thank you, Barb. Follow-up question: Does either the Linksys G or the Linksys N "play nice" with Vista more so than the other? Seems like I've been seeing a lot of wireless connectivity challenges with Vista, but I do not (yet) have the depth of knowledge to follow all that is being said. Thanks again! "Barb Bowman" wrote: 1 draft N is fast and covers more distance than G 2 most definitely. you want to avoid walls, ceilings, duct work, furniture, large appliances, mirrors, etc. a lot depends on the building materials used in your location as well. 3. wireless routers have an embedded access point. you can also purchase a stand alone access points and in many cases you can change a router into an access point. a wireless router will handle protecting you from the nasties on the Internet, provide wired and wireless access in a single box. 4. You should use WPA2 for wireless security and not give the passphrase to anyone else. 5. some printers include wifi networking. you can purchase a wireless print server as an add on. you can also purchase printers with built in ethernet that you can connect to a port on your router. On Thu, 18 Oct 2007 06:50:01 -0700, vermin93 wrote: New to the home pc, so I have several questions to make sure I am setting things up properly. I have a Sony Vaio with Vista. It came with built in wireless. - Other than price, what is the difference between Linksys Wireless-G and Linksys Wireless-N? - I've heard that the location of the router can make a large difference in connectivity. Is there a recommended location? - What is an "access point"? What is is used for? How does it work in relation to a router? - How can I setup the wireless router so that only my laptop(s) will be able to connect? - I am looking at getting a printer as well. How does that work with a router? Do I need to get a wireless printer, or can I somehow connect a printer to a wireless router so that more than one pc can print to the printer. Thanks in advance for any assistance. -- Barb Bowman MS Windows-MVP http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ -- Barb Bowman MS Windows-MVP http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ |