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#41
posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.electronics,rec.boats.building,alt.internet.wireless
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WiFi at Sea (technical, sorry)
Hi, Ian, and group(s),
Would that it did - My reaction comes from merely typing in the URL (the way I usually reach the bridge to configure it) in nnn.nnn.nnn.nnn format, whereupon the pay site(s? - I've not been in an area with more than one at the moment, though the readout shows many presumed pay sites as well, some of which have more strength, but not as good a communications level)) redirects to their signin page. If no DNS lookup is being done, there should be absolutely NO oppertunity for a redirect. Its possible that the router you have put in between your LAN and the bridge is causing this behaviour. You *might* need to set up a static route. The Bridge has a static IP (which I set to be outside the usual use range so as to avoid IP conflicts) - and the Vonage unit IP can't be changed - but, like the Bridge, the DLink can be set to whatever I want, also static. I have used it in DHCP, though, so it will get me on the air - and that on-the-air signal is what Vonage uses to find the MAC address to connect me to the phone grid... Another possibility is you have one of the many varieties of 'search assistant' or internet 'booster' malware on your PC that is trying to reach its homepage and is therefore triggering the wireless ISP login redirect. A full scan with a number of different spyware and virus scanners is probably a good idea at this point. That's possible, but highly unlikely, as I have more than one current, up to date, tool which checks weekly, and also notifies me of any attempt to intrude (very few) or insert malware (even fewer). Full virus and malware scans are done weekly. Oversight (active scanning) is on full time. Do you ever get this redirection when trying to access the Router config page? No. My router is easily accessible through my AP, which is set to the 198.162.(whatever the router uses).xxx class Further, we are now at the point where only a direct connection (NIC) will allow any communication with the top of the mast or beyond. We briefly had connectivity to the Vonage router by going to a DLink DI-614 (ancient tech, left over from my landside home) router WAN port with the bridge, and putting the Vonage unit on one of the LAN ports. I connected to the DLink over wifi and was able to interrogate it and the Vonage unit. For whatever reasons, those abilities (vonage and bridge - I can still look at and configure the DLink) have gone away. Worse, and supportive of the thought that either the Senao is simply junk, or perhaps, also, just unsuited to the purpose, direct (over either configured NIC for setting up the bridge, or DHCP NIC for access to the internet) connection is currently the only way I can communicate. That's not acceptable to me, but it does, at least, after lots of fiddling, as the Senao unit is becoming slow to respond in the main Beacon page (there are more than one; I can connect to lesser strength ones and get a login page more readily than the close, very high [100% link, 89% signal] one which got me started down this road) I've been using, allow me to be on the air, as it's how I'm posting this... Thus, as mentioned elsewhere, I'm ready to replace it; finding a lightly amplified client bridge's - with my specification about how one connects - challenges have been described in other responses. About to take all the yard folks out for a sail today in reward for all the assistance they've rendered in the past; 85, mostly sunny, 2-3 chop, 10-15S should make for a glorious trip to nowhere (we're coming back!) :{)) L8R Skip Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at www.justpickone.org/skip/gallery! Follow us at http://groups.google.com/group/flyingpiglog and/or http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TheFlyingPigLog "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |
#42
posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.electronics,rec.boats.building
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WiFi at Sea (technical, sorry)
In article ,
Larry wrote: Wayne.B wrote in : I'm guessing that the correct sequence of events would be to disconnect the bottom router, connect a PC to the ethernet cable, configure the top bridge, acquire an access point, unplug the PC and replace with the bottom router. The bottom router could be preconfigured to use a different channel than the connected access point. I'm going to take a dropcord to Lionheart, tomorrow, with a waterproof ditty bag because it might rain. I'll take the Skype Phone and this repeater and haul the repeater up the mast on a halyard trailing a 110VAC drop cord to power it. We'll see how that works. This box weighs nothing. Hey Larry, why not take it apart, and see what the internal DC Powersupply runs at? Maybe you could adapt it to 12Vdc or some Low Voltage Dc Powered system, and while your in there, look and see it you could adapt an external antenna, or connector to the antenna port. Bruce in alaska -- add a 2 before @ |
#44
posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.electronics,rec.boats.building,alt.internet.wireless
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Telephone, too (was) WiFi at Sea (technical, sorry)
The conclusion, in any event, is that this unit is not suited to the
purpose This conclusion was drawn for you MONTHS AGO. You just refused to listen. |
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