| | |
My high-speed is as slow as dial-up!
![]() |
•
•
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 56
Reputation:
Solved Threads: 0
I recently moved into a new house where the owner has a high-speed internet connection through Comcast. I installed a wireless-B adapter (made by Linksys) so I could tune in to his signal. After a few days, my computer reverted back to its old dial-up habits. It still takes a long time to connect to pages, and even when I try to get on Google or Yahoo, I sometimes get a page saying "Page not found".
My signal strength with the adapter is "excellant". I have installed a firewall and had a computer-literate friend of mine clean out all the garbage and unnecessary programs that are running and taking up space. I have 256 MB of memory which I am told is standard. (Someone suggested getting more would speed up my computer).
I hate the idea of paying for high-speed and having to deal with all the inconveniences of dial-up performance. Any suggestions as to what else I can check for?
Thanks!
My signal strength with the adapter is "excellant". I have installed a firewall and had a computer-literate friend of mine clean out all the garbage and unnecessary programs that are running and taking up space. I have 256 MB of memory which I am told is standard. (Someone suggested getting more would speed up my computer).
I hate the idea of paying for high-speed and having to deal with all the inconveniences of dial-up performance. Any suggestions as to what else I can check for?
Thanks!
I recommend Cable for Internet, in this case, lets see. Signal is saying excellent. Check and see what your connection speed is. Getting more memory would speed up your computer, how fast programs run and internet shows up. But with 256mb, that should be all u need for simply internet browsing. Well, check ur connection speed and get back to me.
•
•
•
•
Originally Posted by actfray
I recently moved into a new house where the owner has a high-speed internet connection through Comcast. I installed a wireless-B adapter (made by Linksys) so I could tune in to his signal. After a few days, my computer reverted back to its old dial-up habits. It still takes a long time to connect to pages, and even when I try to get on Google or Yahoo, I sometimes get a page saying "Page not found".
My signal strength with the adapter is "excellant". I have installed a firewall and had a computer-literate friend of mine clean out all the garbage and unnecessary programs that are running and taking up space. I have 256 MB of memory which I am told is standard. (Someone suggested getting more would speed up my computer).
I hate the idea of paying for high-speed and having to deal with all the inconveniences of dial-up performance. Any suggestions as to what else I can check for?
It can tell you quite a bit about your setup, and the tools are available on the same site. MTU (maximum transfer unit) settings can make a big difference in broadband performance, and the default values are very often incorrect.
-- Michael RudasHow To Ask Questions The Smart Way (article by Eric Raymond).
Dealing with Malware
My Articles page.
My Best-of-Breed Free Software for Windows list
Other Windows- & Microsoft-related links
The Audio Tech's Page
My blog
The Oak Park Computer Club
PenguiCon 4.0 Open Source & Science Fiction convention, April 21-23, 2006.
Knoppix Linux (CD-bootable) download. information, & support.
does your neighboor know you are doing this?
and are you connecting through the network adapter or through your modem?
if your nieghboor doesn't know you are doing this he could of found you out and changed his settings. if he knows ask him to restart his router(power down then power up), if he doesn't know then go get a cable modem.
and are you connecting through the network adapter or through your modem?
if your nieghboor doesn't know you are doing this he could of found you out and changed his settings. if he knows ask him to restart his router(power down then power up), if he doesn't know then go get a cable modem.
•
•
Join Date: Jan 2004
Posts: 56
Reputation:
Solved Threads: 0
It's not my neighbor that has the router; it's my housemate who lives upstairs. He has checked out everything for me, and even he's mystified. Tonight, I could not even get a signal from the adapter. I did a complete virus scan, but nothing unusual was found. I also installed AdAware a few nights ago.
If my computer is still under warranty, I'll probably just exchange it or have it repaired.
If my computer is still under warranty, I'll probably just exchange it or have it repaired.
•
•
•
•
Originally Posted by actfray
It's not my neighbor that has the router; it's my housemate who lives upstairs. He has checked out everything for me, and even he's mystified. Tonight, I could not even get a signal from the adapter. I did a complete virus scan, but nothing unusual was found. I also installed AdAware a few nights ago.
If my computer is still under warranty, I'll probably just exchange it or have it repaired.
Don't dance to the rhythm - erasure
![]() |
Similar Threads
- Dial-up Connection Problems (Windows 95 / 98 / Me)
Other Threads in the Networking Hardware Configuration Forum
- Previous Thread: Which router?
- Next Thread: Cable Modem Connection Problem
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
802.11 802.11n bluetooth british broadband browserproblems bt connectionproblem connectivity cpu data desktop dual gigabyte hardware infrastructure internet memory network networking news program rdimm reliability riched20.dll routers server storage survey technology telecoms troubleshoot uk upgrade videoconferencing view virgin wireless wirelessnetworking






