2 Intern

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28K Posts

February 5th, 2004 15:00

Having a cable modem for each computer is a very expensive way to do this, as you your cable provider would charge you for three seperate connections and you would have to purchase a cable modem for each computer.  Don't even consider that possibility.  The best way to go is to pick one computer that is centrally located to make the main connection.  Make sure that the cable modem you get has an ethernet connection.  USB-only cable modems will not work in the setup I am describing.  Then get a wireless router.  I recommend models from Linksys, like the  WRT54G or BEFW11S4.  You would connect the cable modem to the Internet or WAN port on the router through an ethernet cable.  You then need an ethernet network card in the computer that will connect at this location and you would connect this ethernet card to one of the LAN ports on the router.  The other computers would need either PCI wireless network cards or USB wireless network adapters, and would connect to the router through the wireless network.  The router will allow computers to connect to the internet throught the cable modem and to connect to each other to share files and printers.

To see how this is done, visit the following sites:

www.linksys.com

www.practicallynetworked.com

www.homenethelp.com

Steve

64 Posts

February 5th, 2004 16:00

Steve,

Thanks for your help ... will check out the links and post back.

Question ... how do I check to see if any of my 3 computers already have ethernet (NIC) cards? Is an ethernet network card the same thing as a PCI wireless network card? If any of my computers already have cards, how do I know if they are compatible with the router I will be getting?

Thanks for bearing with me.  

Bill

2 Intern

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7.3K Posts

February 5th, 2004 17:00


Honest Bill wrote:

Thanks for your help ... will check out the links and post back.  www.linksys.com/edu/ is good

Question ... how do I check to see if any of my 3 computers already have ethernet (NIC) cards? Probably physically look for a phone jack-like connector that has 8 little pins inside, then in the Devoce Manager to see if there is an entry under Ethernet Adapters.  Is an ethernet network card the same thing as a PCI wireless network card? Yes, only one is wired and one is wireless.  If any of my computers already have cards, how do I know if they are compatible with the router I will be getting?  They will be.  You'd need Cat5 cable to reach the computers from where you spot the router.



64 Posts

February 6th, 2004 13:00

John,

Thanks for your reply.

Device manager?

"You'd need Cat5 cable to reach the computers from where you spot the router." ... way over my head!

Remember, I'm a dummie about all of this.

Bill

 

2 Intern

 • 

7.3K Posts

February 9th, 2004 00:00

Control Panel - System - Hardware tab - in the middle Device Manager.  It is a listing of all the hardware found in your system by Windows and the driver info.

Cat5 and Cat5e is networking cable that is used to connect ethernet ports on equipment.  You'd need cables long enough to reach from the router placement to any computer you want to connect without wireless.  With a router, you get up to 253 computers.

www.homenethelp.com and www.practicallynetworked.com are two more good learning sites.

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