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-   -   WIFI Not Connecting to home network (http://forum.ppcgeeks.com/showthread.php?t=61491)

isevilla 03-17-2009 08:32 PM

WIFI Not Connecting to home network
 
I am trying to connect my Sprint Touch Pro to my home network. The router is a linksys dual band N router and theyre a few computers connected to both the 2.4 and 5.0 networks. Before getting this router the touch would connect to the home network which was hidden and used a shorter wep key just fine. The router is still hidden but now uses wep 104 encryption.

I have setup the phone pretty much the same way it was before with the exception of a longer key. All other computers and game systems connect just fine.

Any help or ideas?

Thanks in advance,

Is.

kennyidaho 03-17-2009 09:11 PM

Re: WIFI Not Connecting to home network
 
You don't have any mac address filtering going on do you? On the touch pro did you make sure to deleting the old network and then adding the new one? You can delete the network under Settings > connections > Wi-Fi > hold down your stylus on the network and pick remove.

Also why are you still using WEP? Just to let you know it's not entirely secure also hiding your network really only serves to add a layer of difficulty that you have to deal with when setting up your devices. The rest of the world can and still does see hidden networks.

isevilla 03-17-2009 11:08 PM

Re: WIFI Not Connecting to home network
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by kennyidaho (Post 778895)
You don't have any mac address filtering going on do you? On the touch pro did you make sure to deleting the old network and then adding the new one? You can delete the network under Settings > connections > Wi-Fi > hold down your stylus on the network and pick remove.

Also why are you still using WEP? Just to let you know it's not entirely secure also hiding your network really only serves to add a layer of difficulty that you have to deal with when setting up your devices. The rest of the world can and still does see hidden networks.

I just did the mac filtering again but when I was trying to connect it was disabled. I did find the mac address of the phone and added it to the list on the router and it still didnt connect. So didnt connect with or without the mac filtering.

Yes the old network was deleted. New one was created.

Used Wep so that it would be easier for the kids to remember the key as their laptops are not on the N network like mine are. My pc and laptop are on the N network with wpa2 i believe enabled.

As far as hiding the network I havent had any trouble connecting the other devices except for the touch.

Asphyx 03-17-2009 11:40 PM

Re: WIFI Not Connecting to home network
 
First off don't use WEP...
It's insecure and you can't easily use passwords as they are nine miles long depending on the software trying to use it...

Switch the router to WPA2-Personal....
Much easier to maintain and way more secure than WEP.

You don't really need macfiltering unless you want to deny some computers on your network from having access to the router. It doesn't really make your computer any more secure because it is so easy to clone and spoof a mac address if your trying to hack.

With Linksys also when you disable the filter you might have to do a cold reboot (unplug wait 30 secs then power up again.)
You want to re-enable again after you get your connection issues solved thats fine.

santod 03-18-2009 12:15 AM

Re: WIFI Not Connecting to home network
 
Also, you might try setting it for Work Network instead of any other setting for your WLAN. That was what worked for me with my Touch Pro and Linksys N router.

kennyidaho 03-18-2009 01:19 AM

Re: WIFI Not Connecting to home network
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by isevilla (Post 779214)
I just did the mac filtering again but when I was trying to connect it was disabled. I did find the mac address of the phone and added it to the list on the router and it still didnt connect. So didnt connect with or without the mac filtering.

Yes the old network was deleted. New one was created.

Used Wep so that it would be easier for the kids to remember the key as their laptops are not on the N network like mine are. My pc and laptop are on the N network with wpa2 i believe enabled.

As far as hiding the network I havent had any trouble connecting the other devices except for the touch.

Okay you have me utterly confused. Perhaps this is something this router does; but two wireless networks and two security configurations from one router? Typically the router will accept a/b/g/n clients and communicate with them on whatever standard they support. Maybe I am getting old.

MAC filtering is a bad idea. With mac filtering all your doing is providing any would be hackers a nice list of mac addresses to spoof. Which makes network intrusion detection on your part harder because all you'll see is a familiar MAC address, but in fact it's the pimple faced kid next door spoofing the MAC address of your kids laptop.

Hidden networks are a false security. I can log into my router and it will show me all these "hidden" networks. With a couple keystrokes on my computer I can easily decloak any hidden SSID's. It's pointless and leads to bad security judgments because one assumes they are safe because they are hidden. Hidden networks also cause a host of performance issues.

WEP keys are normally long strings that are hard to remember and easy to crack, same pimple faced kid next door would be able to crack your WEP key in a matter of moments. WPA is much better, it's much more secure and plus you can use words that humans read.

Honestly at this point my best suggestion is unhide your SSID, move all your encryption to WPA or WPA2. Stop filtering MAC addresses, and stop restricting certain devices to certain 802.11 standards. What you'll end up with is a possibly a better performing network, that is more secure and I willing to bet your touch will work.

I know it's not what you want to hear.

isevilla 03-19-2009 01:33 PM

Re: WIFI Not Connecting to home network
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by kennyidaho (Post 779521)
Okay you have me utterly confused. Perhaps this is something this router does; but two wireless networks and two security configurations from one router? Typically the router will accept a/b/g/n clients and communicate with them on whatever standard they support. Maybe I am getting old.

This particular router has dual bands which is actually two networks in one router if you want to use that way. I have our non N laptops connected to the 2.4 ghz mixed mode network and the N card machines connected to the 5 ghz N only mode.

Quote:

Originally Posted by kennyidaho (Post 779521)
MAC filtering is a bad idea. With mac filtering all your doing is [providing any would be hackers a nice list of mac addresses to spoof. Which makes network intrusion detection on your part harder because all you'll see is a familiar MAC address, but in fact it's the pimple faced kid next door spoofing the MAC address of your kids laptop.

Very good point... I have disabled the mac address filtering altogether.

Quote:

Originally Posted by kennyidaho (Post 779521)
Hidden networks are a false security. I can log into my router and it will show me all these "hidden" networks. With a couple keystrokes on my computer I can easily decloak any hidden SSID's. It's pointless and leads to bad security judgments because one assumes they are safe because they are hidden. Hidden networks also cause a host of performance issues.

This has always been a real pain in the butt when a pc lost its connection and wouldnt connect again and I would have to go through hoops to get it back online. I have disabled this as well.

Quote:

Originally Posted by kennyidaho (Post 779521)
WEP keys are normally long strings that are hard to remember and easy to crack, same pimple faced kid next door would be able to crack your WEP key in a matter of moments. WPA is much better, it's much more secure and plus you can use words that humans read.

Currently the 2.4 ghz mixed network has wep and that is because we have 1 machine that we lost our product key for and we cant get anything other than wep to work on it at this time (long story). The N network has wpa2 in place.

And funny that you mention that pimple faced kid scenario because I noticed last night that we had someone else on our network. We have a ps3 on our network and im not sure if they got in that way or not but anyway I blocked the pc.

Quote:

Originally Posted by kennyidaho (Post 779521)
Honestly at this point my best suggestion is unhide your SSID, move all your encryption to WPA or WPA2. Stop filtering MAC addresses, and stop restricting certain devices to certain 802.11 standards. What you'll end up with is a possibly a better performing network, that is more secure and I willing to bet your touch will work.

I have done all the above and after doing so my touch pro connected immediately to the network. It totally doesnt like connecting to hidden networks for some reason because as soon as I allowed the ssid broadcast it connected.

Quote:

Originally Posted by kennyidaho (Post 779521)
I know it's not what you want to hear.

Im always open to suggestions as I would not have come here to ask for them in the first place :)

Thank you for your help and suggestions!

isevilla 03-19-2009 01:34 PM

Re: WIFI Not Connecting to home network
 
Thank you everyone who responded for your help!

kennyidaho 03-19-2009 02:32 PM

Re: WIFI Not Connecting to home network
 
I finally got caught up on these dual band access points and it's pretty cool stuff. Just now I feel a little behind. I guess it's impossible to keep up anymore.

I am glad you got things working. As far as the PS3, on my network the PS3 used to always show up as * or it was just blank. I assigned a static IP address to it and my router lets me adjust the name that displays in the log.


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