D
Don Kallman
I work at Marquette university as a TSS in the College of Arts and Sciences.
I had a few student bring in their dell laptops during New Student
Orientation because they were having a problem connecting to the network on
campus. I quickly realized what the problem was (or so I thought) and
disabled the N mode of the wireless card (switching it to b/g rather than
a/b/g). However, this didn't work, and ultimately those students had to call
Dell and be informed that their computers would not connect to our wireless
network. I noticed while I was looking at the driver settings that these
cards are on both IPv4 and IPv6 at the same time. I was wondering, does
this make a difference? They were the same model notebooks running vista
home premium. I ran out of ideas and turned them to Dell but im still
looking for answers.
I had a few student bring in their dell laptops during New Student
Orientation because they were having a problem connecting to the network on
campus. I quickly realized what the problem was (or so I thought) and
disabled the N mode of the wireless card (switching it to b/g rather than
a/b/g). However, this didn't work, and ultimately those students had to call
Dell and be informed that their computers would not connect to our wireless
network. I noticed while I was looking at the driver settings that these
cards are on both IPv4 and IPv6 at the same time. I was wondering, does
this make a difference? They were the same model notebooks running vista
home premium. I ran out of ideas and turned them to Dell but im still
looking for answers.