I'm using windows XP. I'm too broke for regular internet, so right now I an using free dial up (not too reliable). But also I live right at the outer range of a free wifi hotspot that I can just barely connect to using a cantenna. (I've tried many antennas, this has been the strongest). But even with that, the signal goes in and out and only works 1/3 of the time.
Well the problem is, whenever the wifi experiences trouble, my dial up connects and completely TAKES OVER, so that even when the wifi gets signal again, my computer sticks with using the slow dial up signal.
This gets really frustrating when its constantly dialing, and many times I'll disconnect, and the wifi will go down 2 seconds later, so I'm waiting 60 more seconds to reconnect on dial up.
Is there any way (either a setting, or even software) to make the wifi take the high priority rather than the dial up. Or even better, use them both simultaneously, so I'm not doing constant juggling?
2007-03-02
15:22:19
·
13 answers
·
asked by
Rockstar from another dimension
1
in
Computers & Internet
➔ Computer Networking
All dial up is different, I know this works for AT&T's dialer maybe others. If your dialer creates a 'virtual adapter' in your network connections, and if it allows you to right click->properties, open TCPIP properties and in Advanced, deselect automatic metric and set it manually to 10. Go into your wireless and do the same, set the metric to 1. This will give your wireless adapter priority, but I am not sure it will do any good if you keep dropping so much.
2007-03-02 15:29:20
·
answer #1
·
answered by Gene M 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
that's achievable, yet probable to no longer the tip which you will like. Any UNIX-like working gadget (FreeBSD, SunOS, IRIX, or perhaps Linux) can help this truthfully. The community administration of any of those helps routing which permits community site visitors to be despatched over between the put in community interfaces. We positioned 2 community interface playing cards into each and each workstation: one is a gigabit community and is used for highspeed records substitute between our 'community' computers, on the same time as the different is a connection to a 100BaseT community and is used for interactive and different community site visitors. My journey with abode windows is extremely constrained and from what Ive seen it could help in simple terms one lively community interface at a time -- be style if Im incorrect on that. whether abode windows can help distinctive lively community interfaces it sounds like the two your under pressure connection and prompt connection are to the comparable router, and meaning that your finished community throughput is constrained with the help of your connection out the different component on your DSL or cable service's community. gazing the numbers, whether you have an previous 10BaseT community interface card (approximately 10mbps), your throughput between the workstation and the router on the under pressure connection continues to be probable plenty extra advantageous than the max downstream records cost out of your service, so having a parallel connection can no longer function on your speed.
2016-10-02 07:26:40
·
answer #2
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
you could set up a proxy server that will log onto your wireless network. You would then connect this to the same network as your adsl connection (your LAN) BUT set the default gateway and route to the gateway of the wireless connection. Your machines on the LAN would use DHCP/STATIC IPs that would get the gateway as the ADSL connections gateway. You then enter the proxy machine's LAN IP address as your proxy server into your browsers. when you're browsing, the traffic will go through the proxy server, the proxy server will then make the request and send the info to you via the wireless connection, it's gateway. any other connections to internet services that aren't configured to use the proxy on your computer will use your adsl connection gateway.(P2P, ftp, IM, etc.) configure the proxy settings for apps you don't want to be "bogged down" by your rampant file sharing.... You could also buy a very expensive Cisco router to do the same based on port or packet information, but that's probably not worth it. Either way, you're going to have to be in the high-intermediate -> expert class on your network/*nix skills to get this to work correctly.
2007-03-02 15:26:40
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋
Click on Start then go to Control Panel & go to Internet Options then go to Connections tab & select the Wifi connection as the default connection to use instead of the dial up.
2007-03-03 09:36:35
·
answer #4
·
answered by vanessa 4
·
0⤊
1⤋
There should be a setting in the dial-up networking connection for "Dial this connection automatically when no network connection is present". Turn it off and see if that solves your problem.
2007-03-02 15:30:32
·
answer #5
·
answered by computerguy103 6
·
0⤊
1⤋
The cheapest DSL will cost 8 bucks more than dail up. That will pretty much solve your problem. Otherwise get a job. Good Luck.
2007-03-02 17:17:18
·
answer #6
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Yeah.....no. All of those things just stated are results of the conflict of your internet connection trying to use to seperate connections, keep doing that and more problems will occur. Answer, simple, just choose the most reliabe connection to work with temporarily and then upgrade when you can.
2007-03-02 15:29:58
·
answer #7
·
answered by jrmygray 3
·
0⤊
1⤋
Need a loan cuz i mean 15-25 bucks a month but you can have 2 ive got Boohoo &all over lost no problem except AOL hasnt billed me yet i might have just 1 shortly
2007-03-02 15:29:28
·
answer #8
·
answered by havenjohnny 6
·
0⤊
2⤋
You just need a modem or lan board for each line you want going into your computer. I actually knew of a guy that had like 20 phone lines going into his computer (he was stealing money from the company I worked for.)
2007-03-02 15:27:09
·
answer #9
·
answered by Moral Orel 6
·
0⤊
2⤋
Ummm I think your pushing your luck. I dont think there is with the dial up... its pretty tough!
2007-03-02 15:27:43
·
answer #10
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋