Specifications
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- Wireless card features
- Setting up your wireless card
- Troubleshooting
- Placement of your wireless networking hardware for optimal performance
- You cannot connect to the Internet wirelessly
- The installation CD does not start WNU
- The Power LED does not come on. The card is not working
- The Link LED is blinking slowly and you cannot connect to a wireless network or the Internet
- The Link LED is solid, but you cannot connect to the Internet
- The data transfer is sometimes slow or signal strength is poor
- Why are there two wireless utilities in your system tray? Which one should you use?
- The card does not work or the connection is unstable when the computer has a second built-in wireless network card (such as a mini PCI or Intel® Centrino™)
- Card does not work or the connection is slow when computer has a built-in wired Ethernet card
- Specifications
- Legal notices
- One-Year Limited Warranty

20
Setting up your wireless card
For instance:
AF 0F 4B C3 D4 = 64-bit WEP key
4 Click Save to finish. Encryption in the wireless router is now set. Each of your
computers on your wireless network will now need to be configured with the same
security settings.
Caution: If you are using a wireless client (such as your notebook equipped with a wireless
notebook card) to turn on the security settings in your wireless router, you will temporarily
lose your wireless connection until you activate security on your wireless client. Record the
key prior to applying changes in the wireless router. If you don’t remember the hex key,
your client will be locked out of the wireless router.
Setting up 128-bit WEP encryption:
1 Select OPEN from the Network Authentication menu on the Wireless Network
Properties tab on the Edit information for a network page.
2 Select WEP from the Data Encryption menu.
3 After selecting your WEP encryption mode, you can enter your key by typing in the hex
key manually, or you can type in a passphrase in the Passphrase field, then click
Generate to create a key.
A hex (hexadecimal) key is a combination of numbers and letters from A–F and 0–9.
For 128-bit WEP, you need to enter 26 hex characters.