Q. I need to manage time of my children in using internet. I often turn off the router to do this. However, if my children turn on the router, they continue using internet. How can I disconnect wireless of computers although my children turn on the router. My house use wireless. Thanks
A. Many routers will allow you to set times that the connection will work. Read your router's manual to see if yours offers that feature. If it doesn't, an update to the firmware might implement that feature. If not, you'll have to replace the router with one that does. I know for a fact that both the Linksys WRT160N and Netgear WRN834B V2 routers support that feature set. There are probably other routers from those manufacturers that support it, as well as routers from other manufacturers that do.
Tip: Make SURE to set a hardened password and keep it secret from the kids! Kids have an annoying habit of being able to figure these things out!
Tip: Make SURE to set a hardened password and keep it secret from the kids! Kids have an annoying habit of being able to figure these things out!
why cant i get wirelss internet on my laptop?
Q. my dad just gave me a toshiba laptop.i have a router but i dont know how to get my internet on it.its has wifi built into it or something like that and i dont know what to do and im getting really frustrated the router is a linksys wrt160n v2 and my dad gave me a dynex internet card which isn't working please help
A. Have you set up the router to accept wireless signals? Have you looked at the wireless configuration pages (type 192.168.1.1 into a browser address bar)? Have you read the manual for the router? Have you read the manual for the Internet card? Have you Googled for a solution?
I have a router in my basement but the signal strength is bad when im playing my PS3.?
Q. Can I get a wireless router for my room to make the signal stronger for online play and if I can what wireless router do you recommend that is quality but not to expensive?
A. The Linksys WRT160N is good, but since you are gaming, the D-Link routers with ubicom CPUs have the best QoS because it is all automatic and effective. QoS will prioritize upstream packets from your LAN to your modem, so gaming has priority over any computer with P2P. If you play any online games, QoS is a must because it really reduces headaches.
The D-Link DIR-625 is the cheapest router with that CPU but is great. The Linksys routers have QoS but it is all manual and you need to configure TCP/UDP ports for each different game you play which is quite annoying for console games as port numbers are not always documented.
http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/content/view/30409/96/
http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/content/view/30387/96/
I'd really recommend a wireless repeater or ethernet bridge with a long cable instead of replacing your router. THe best ones are actually build yourself and it is easy.
For 802.11g, the Linksys WRT54GL (not WRT54G or WRT54GS) is the best option.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833124190
Then flash with DD-WRT (or tomato) firmware and create a Repeater Bridge in the DD-WRT setup.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833124190
Add a Virtual Interface for the repeater and give it a new SSID and WPA2-PSK AES passphrase. THen enter in the SSID and WPA/WEP key of your base router and it should setup the bridge.
Guide for Repeater
http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Repeater_Bridge
Position the repeater mid way between the PS3 and base router, then connect to the repeater SSID from the PS3.
Or you can use a wireless ethernet bridge with a longer cable. Note the Repeater bridge will also bridge the repeater's ethernet ports to the base station so it is essentially a repeater + a wireless ethernet bridge, but the DD-WRT setup for a Wireless bridge requires fewer steps to setup.
Guide for Ethernet Bridge
http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Wireless_Bridge
You can also buy a powerline adapter with or without 802.11g WAP extended. These are more expensive and have lower bandwidth and mixed reviews. They do works but with varied results
http://www.dlink.ca/products/?sec=1&pid=533
http://www.netgear.com/Products/PowerlineNetworking/PowerlineWirelessAccessPoints.aspx
http://www.netgear.com/Products/PowerlineNetworking/PowerlineEthernetAdapters.aspx
The best Ideal option is a new simultaneous dual band 802.11n router with a simultaneous dual band 802.11n ethernet bridge.
For a store bought Ethernet Bridge, the Linksys WGA600N is the best option with a Linksys WRT610N router. It supports simultaneous dual band 802.11n, which is great.
It is likely too expensive. THe repeater idea should work just fine IF your base router is good.
The D-Link DIR-625 is the cheapest router with that CPU but is great. The Linksys routers have QoS but it is all manual and you need to configure TCP/UDP ports for each different game you play which is quite annoying for console games as port numbers are not always documented.
http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/content/view/30409/96/
http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/content/view/30387/96/
I'd really recommend a wireless repeater or ethernet bridge with a long cable instead of replacing your router. THe best ones are actually build yourself and it is easy.
For 802.11g, the Linksys WRT54GL (not WRT54G or WRT54GS) is the best option.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833124190
Then flash with DD-WRT (or tomato) firmware and create a Repeater Bridge in the DD-WRT setup.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16833124190
Add a Virtual Interface for the repeater and give it a new SSID and WPA2-PSK AES passphrase. THen enter in the SSID and WPA/WEP key of your base router and it should setup the bridge.
Guide for Repeater
http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Repeater_Bridge
Position the repeater mid way between the PS3 and base router, then connect to the repeater SSID from the PS3.
Or you can use a wireless ethernet bridge with a longer cable. Note the Repeater bridge will also bridge the repeater's ethernet ports to the base station so it is essentially a repeater + a wireless ethernet bridge, but the DD-WRT setup for a Wireless bridge requires fewer steps to setup.
Guide for Ethernet Bridge
http://www.dd-wrt.com/wiki/index.php/Wireless_Bridge
You can also buy a powerline adapter with or without 802.11g WAP extended. These are more expensive and have lower bandwidth and mixed reviews. They do works but with varied results
http://www.dlink.ca/products/?sec=1&pid=533
http://www.netgear.com/Products/PowerlineNetworking/PowerlineWirelessAccessPoints.aspx
http://www.netgear.com/Products/PowerlineNetworking/PowerlineEthernetAdapters.aspx
The best Ideal option is a new simultaneous dual band 802.11n router with a simultaneous dual band 802.11n ethernet bridge.
For a store bought Ethernet Bridge, the Linksys WGA600N is the best option with a Linksys WRT610N router. It supports simultaneous dual band 802.11n, which is great.
It is likely too expensive. THe repeater idea should work just fine IF your base router is good.
Internet doesn't work when router is connected to it
Q. When my modem is connected directly to my computer my Internet works but when I connect router to modem Internet stops working?!?
Model Number:WRT160N
Manufacturer:Linksys
Model Number:WRT160N
Manufacturer:Linksys
A. what you think you just plugg it in and you have internet ???
it has to be configured . read the manual
it has to be configured . read the manual
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