Hi folks,
Maybe I’m getting old... but it always frustrates me the PC world, where
difficult things are made so easy… whereas things that should be easy to
explain become “obscure holes” nobody dares to dig in!
I’ve done quite a number of ADSL installations, different ISPs,
different HW, different routers.I usually install one first PC, via RJ45
cable, one second PC wireless (WIFI).But so far I never had to install a
third or fourth PC. Well, some day had to be the first time!
Today I had some problems, and trying to analize them, called up
technical support of our ISP just to end up having a big and fustrating
discussion.
I see different questions. Forgive me if some of them seem stupid, but
when I don’t know something… just escalate it to find the answer, and
this was no the case!
All routers I’ve seen so far, when you configure them for security, say
WEP type, will ask you 64 or 128 bits? Character or Hexa? Those are clear.
But then, when you enter the key (usually, it’s pre-assigned by the ISP
in the router itself, in its bottom) you can type it up 4 times for
KeyIndex =1, 2, 3, 4
(Maybe they could even be different, but that I never tried)
The MAIN problem down I think relates to the meaning of what is called
"KeyIndex".
The problem is I had my first WIFI configured, default is KeyIndex 1,
and worked OK.
Did the same for a second PC, exactly equal, and got an error :
duplicate names in the network??? (By the way, PC-Ids are different!)
Of course, they both had WinXP Professional SP2 (plus lots of other
fixes), DHCP enabled, IP address automatic, DNS automatic, … etc
I thought one could have MANY (not thousands, of course, because of
performance, but 5 or 8, maybe?, up to 10?, PCs WIFI connected to the
same network)
Questions:
1- What is the “meaning” of that “secret word” KeyIndex? I searched
Google, but found tons of info about basics and advanced configurations…
but no one dignified to get down to explain basic things like this!
2- If I have to give each PC configured for my network a different
KeyIndex… does that mean one can only have up to 4 WIFI PC’s connected
at a time?
Same question but reversed: How many WIFI PC’s can coexist (regardless
performance) in the same network?
3- My technical suppoprt ended up saying KeyIndex was none of the
parameters asked for WIFI !!! even though I was telling him “I have it
in front of me”!!! and suggested me to
- Eliminate any use of DHCP!
- Hard configre an IP address for each PC (?)
- Same for DNS
- … absolutely nonsense!
Or… am I absolutely wrong?
TIA
Sorry for this lengthy mail
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