"Rasman99" <> wrote in message
news:dxrin.45705$...
>
>
> "Richard in AZ" <> wrote in message news:hmcsq8$k73$...
>> A friend has six XP Home Edition computers and a new Windows 7 Premium PC on a wireless home LAN.
>> The wireless router is setup with WPA-2 Personal security.
>> He is handicapped and has computers located around the house so that he does not have to move
>> around allot.
>> Two are in a basement sewing room for his wife and the new Win7 PC is in his garage workshop.
>>
>> The XP computers all connect automatically when booting.
>> But right from the initial setup the Win7 PC has been a problem.
>> It would reject the WPA-2 security code as not valid. I have confirmed that it was being entered
>> correctly.
>> I was updating several of his other PC's, then later I went back to this WIN7 PC and found it
>> was connected and on the LAN.
>> But on the next reboot it refused the connection stating "the parameters are not setup correctly"
>> then in a little while I found it back on the LAN and connecting to the Internet even though I
>> had not worked on it.
>>
>> Now then I found that when it reboots, it rejects the security code and will not connect. But if
>> I went to any of the other XP machines and open Network Neighborhood, the Win7 machine will
>> suddenly show up and when I go back to this PC it is connected. Now when the user want to use
>> that machine on the Internet, he boots it and goes to any other computer and just opens Network
>> neighborhood and it will be connected. Now he takes an XP laptop to the garage with him to
>> challenge the Win7 PC with Network Neighborhood.
>>
>> The new Window 7 PC is an Acer desktop, as are several of the XP's, but two of the XP's are
>> Gateways. Sorry I don't have specs on any of them. But does anyone have any suggestions as how
>> to bully the new Win7 PC into accepting the LAN security on boot-up without going to another PC
>> to challenge it on the NETWORK?
>>
> I had an issue like this.... it turned out to be a firmware upgrade for the Router (Belkin)
> needed. The Win 7 machine wouldn't authenticate but XP/Vista did no problem. The Win7 machine
> had worked on other WLAN routers so I knew the individual elements of the solution all worked in
> isolation.
>
Thanks, I will pass that suggestion on.
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