Entries Tagged 'external Network Adaptors' ↓
July 24th, 2011 — external Network Adaptors
hello, I own a Packard Bell E1 series Notebook. It has a built in wireless network adaptor which picks up my wireless internet very well. I recently formatted the laptop and reinstalled XP Home edition and SP2. Now the computer does not show any wireless network in Network connections and does not automatically connect to the internet as it did before. what could the problem be?
it might be that you simply have to reinstall the wireless adaptor driver. go to the website of you laptop manufacturer and look at all the available downloads under support. you should be able to find the driver under your model number.
i had the same problem with my dell and that's the only thing that did it.
There are chipset and device drivers that need to be installed to activate the motherboard resources. Windows is not able to provide all the required drivers for your motherboard, after a OS reinstall you will need the computers model specific chipset and device drivers replaced. these are found at your computer makers website under the model information download section.
You want the Ethernet driver in specific.
The problem is simple.
Ring your internet provider and they can take control of your computer.
They will adjust your internet settings so that the adapter is working in sync with the computers internet settings.
July 11th, 2011 — external Network Adaptors
It is called BELKIN F5D7050 Wireless 802.11g USB Network Adapter
shopping.lycos.com/product/view/m…
Any help or suggestions is appreciated.
no, you have to use the proper microsoft one.
May 30th, 2011 — external Network Adaptors
“The scale of your influence, and therefore the size of your photo, is based on two measures.
1. The number of people who directly click on your unique URL link. this is the primary measure of your influence, pure and simple.
2. you will receive partial ‘credit’ for subsequent clicks generated by those who register as a result of your URL. in other words, anyone who comes to the site through your link and registers for their own account will be spreading your influence while they spread theirs. That way, you get some benefit from influencing people who are influential themselves. We will give a diminishing, fractional credit (1/2, 1/4, 1/8 etc ) for clicks generated up to six degrees away from your original link.”
Six degrees of influence, eh? Sounds like a brilliant link bait pyramid scheme, at least to Michael Arrington, who’s apparently trying to get a picture of Chevy Chase on the November issue cover. Now if you’ll excuse me, I’ve got Facebook friends to annoy.
via Fast Company via TechCrunch