User's Manual

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2. The computer does not recognize the 802.11g USB Adapter.
Make sure that 802.11g USB Adapter is properly seated in the
computer’s PCI slot.
If Windows does not detect the hardware upon insertion of the
Adapter make sure to completely remove drivers that were previously
installed. To remove the drivers, do the following:
A. Under Tools> select Folder Options…> select View >
under Hidden files and folders > select Show hidden
files and folders.
B. Uncheck Hide extension for known file types > click on
Apply.
C. Search for the files N3AB.sys and netN3AB.inf. Remove
these files from the INF and SYSTEM32 (DRIVERS) folders
in the Windows directory. Note: in Windows XP and
Windows 2000 will rename netN3AB.inf that have not
received certification into oem.inf files (e.g., oem1.inf.)
Therefore, please also remove all oem*.inf and oem*.PNF
files in inf folder of WINNT.
3. 802.11g USB Adapter does not work properly after the driver is
installed.
Restart the computer. (In some cases, it will be necessary to restart
the computer after installing the drivers.)
In Windows XP, go to Start>Control Panel>System>Hardware
Tab> click on the Device Manager Tab> click on Network Cards>
double click on 802.11g USB Adapter > make sure that “This
device is working properly” is displayed under Device Status
under the General Tab.
If the device is not working properly and a yellow exclamation mark is
displayed, then there is probably a resource conflict. In this case,
make sure the computer system has a free IRQ and if necessary,
uninstall the drivers, restart the system, and repeat the driver
installation procedure.