Q. Hello. How do I go about shutting off the wireless feature of my Linksys WRT160N Router (Wireless-N Broadbrand Router)? I am not sure if this particular router has the option or not. I may be wrong. Please help me. I do not need the wireless running right now. I am only using the wired Ethernet ports at this time. Disabling this feature will help me in terms of security. Thank you!
A. Access the setup page of the router by launching an
Browser and type on the address bar, 192.168.1.1 and press enter. When
it prompts for the username and password, leave the username field
empty and provide password as "admin" (Without quotes)
click on ok.
Click on Wireless Tab & Select the wireless network mode to disable.
This would disable the wireless features of the router.
Browser and type on the address bar, 192.168.1.1 and press enter. When
it prompts for the username and password, leave the username field
empty and provide password as "admin" (Without quotes)
click on ok.
Click on Wireless Tab & Select the wireless network mode to disable.
This would disable the wireless features of the router.
How can I get my Linksys ethernet wireless router to send a signal to my Mac?
Q. I have a Mac and its wireless, but I get no signal from the Linksys, and I can't use the disk to install the device. Is there another way?
A. If your wireless MAC is the only computer on your network, and you have a modem that was hardwired to the MAC, which you now want to go wireless with. Then you must follow the setup procedures for the router step by step. Skipping any step will likely mean you do not get a signal.
Connect the MAC to the modem with a hard wire cable and make sure your internet is working correctly. Then follow the setup guide for your router, to place it inline with the modem and computer, again, this is a hard wire set up. Hard wire to the modem from the router WAN port. Hard wire from the router LAN port to the LAN port on the MAC. Follow the steps to set up your wireless network, along with security. (IF YOU CROSS A STEP THAT ASKS ABOUT CLONING THE MAC ADDRESS - SAY YES !!!!) This is critical on many DSL and Cable providers, as they expect the modem to see the computer, and not the router. Cloning the MAC address of the computer - in this case also a MAC, two different meanings - makes the modem think it is still talking directly to the computer, and not to the router.
Once you have everything set up, you can remove the hard wire between the router and the MAC. This will cause you to lose your internet. Don't panic. You now need to search for the wireless network you just set up, using the wifi card in the MAC. Connect to your network by selecting it and entering the security code you created when setting up the wireless network. Once you connect, your internet should be back on. Tell it to connect automatically each time the network is in range to allow it to reconnect each time you come home.
Connect the MAC to the modem with a hard wire cable and make sure your internet is working correctly. Then follow the setup guide for your router, to place it inline with the modem and computer, again, this is a hard wire set up. Hard wire to the modem from the router WAN port. Hard wire from the router LAN port to the LAN port on the MAC. Follow the steps to set up your wireless network, along with security. (IF YOU CROSS A STEP THAT ASKS ABOUT CLONING THE MAC ADDRESS - SAY YES !!!!) This is critical on many DSL and Cable providers, as they expect the modem to see the computer, and not the router. Cloning the MAC address of the computer - in this case also a MAC, two different meanings - makes the modem think it is still talking directly to the computer, and not to the router.
Once you have everything set up, you can remove the hard wire between the router and the MAC. This will cause you to lose your internet. Don't panic. You now need to search for the wireless network you just set up, using the wifi card in the MAC. Connect to your network by selecting it and entering the security code you created when setting up the wireless network. Once you connect, your internet should be back on. Tell it to connect automatically each time the network is in range to allow it to reconnect each time you come home.
How to make Linksys wireless router private?
Q. I have a Linksys wireless router and want to keep it private. Can you tell me step-by-step what to do? Thank you!
A. One thing that one must do is password protect ones router in order to keep people from logging into your network and stealing sensitive data.
If you think offenders are logging into your network through a router, than password protect your router.
Log into your router. Set up the password there.
XP
1) Goto Start/Run
2) Type in "cmd"
Vista
1) Click the Start button
2) Type in "command"
Once you are in the command prompt:
1)Type in "ipconfig"
2) In your Internet browser type in "http://" followed by your default gateway (found in the command prompt)
***Example: http://192.168.1.1 (try clicking the link)
3) Login (search online for login info) Usually admin, password
3) There should be a link on the side somewhere. It should have several options like WEP, WPA etc.
Another method is implementing MAC addressing or dynamically assigned IP addresses.
Regards,
Dane
If you think offenders are logging into your network through a router, than password protect your router.
Log into your router. Set up the password there.
XP
1) Goto Start/Run
2) Type in "cmd"
Vista
1) Click the Start button
2) Type in "command"
Once you are in the command prompt:
1)Type in "ipconfig"
2) In your Internet browser type in "http://" followed by your default gateway (found in the command prompt)
***Example: http://192.168.1.1 (try clicking the link)
3) Login (search online for login info) Usually admin, password
3) There should be a link on the side somewhere. It should have several options like WEP, WPA etc.
Another method is implementing MAC addressing or dynamically assigned IP addresses.
Regards,
Dane
If you reset a Linksys router will it do anything to the connections its already setup to?
Q. I have a linksys router and i wanted to get internet on my wii. And i forget my password so i want to reset it, but im not sure if it will do anything to the computers that have hooked up to it already. Will it?
A. It will disconnect. Also, all your wireless computers will still be using the old encryption key and won't be able to connect to the router. Also, the router will no longer have your Internet Service Provider's gateway IP address and Domain Name Server IP addresses. You'll have to set them all back up again.
All for a Wii?
Here's how to find the encryption key: If the encryption key isn't on a label on your wireless modem or router, the likeliest place to find it is in your router's admin pages. Exactly where in those pages varies from brand to brand. If you don't have a router, the following should apply to your modem itself.
Basically, to get into the admin pages, do this:
1.On a computer connected to a wired port on your router (wireless access to the admin pages should be turned off as a security risk), enter the router's local IP address in your browser's address window.ON A LINKSYS, THIS IS PROBABLY 192.168.1.1. THE LOGIN IS USUALLY A BLANK USERNAME AND ADMIN AS THE PASSWORD.
2.Poke around, especially under wireless security, until you find the encryption key. Copy it down EXACTLY. Copy-and-pasting it into a text file (Wordpad is generally best because it's on almost all Windows machines) is even better, as it can be copy-and-pasted from there into whatever needs it. When you see it, you'll understand why this is a good idea.
To find your router�s IP address in Windows:
3.Click on the Start->Run button.
4.In the text box, type
cmd
and press Enter.
5.A black "DOS box" will pop up. In it, enter
ipconfig /all
A bunch of gibberish will fill the box. Next to "Default Gateway" an IP address will appear. This is your router's IP address.
Hope that helps.
All for a Wii?
Here's how to find the encryption key: If the encryption key isn't on a label on your wireless modem or router, the likeliest place to find it is in your router's admin pages. Exactly where in those pages varies from brand to brand. If you don't have a router, the following should apply to your modem itself.
Basically, to get into the admin pages, do this:
1.On a computer connected to a wired port on your router (wireless access to the admin pages should be turned off as a security risk), enter the router's local IP address in your browser's address window.ON A LINKSYS, THIS IS PROBABLY 192.168.1.1. THE LOGIN IS USUALLY A BLANK USERNAME AND ADMIN AS THE PASSWORD.
2.Poke around, especially under wireless security, until you find the encryption key. Copy it down EXACTLY. Copy-and-pasting it into a text file (Wordpad is generally best because it's on almost all Windows machines) is even better, as it can be copy-and-pasted from there into whatever needs it. When you see it, you'll understand why this is a good idea.
To find your router�s IP address in Windows:
3.Click on the Start->Run button.
4.In the text box, type
cmd
and press Enter.
5.A black "DOS box" will pop up. In it, enter
ipconfig /all
A bunch of gibberish will fill the box. Next to "Default Gateway" an IP address will appear. This is your router's IP address.
Hope that helps.
Powered by Yahoo! Answers
No comments:
Post a Comment