|
Marilyn has been pushing
me for two years to network our two PCs so that she can send and receive
e-mail on her own PC. Frankly, she was tired of waiting to use my PC
connection to the Internet but more than likely, she was tired of
reading the off-color humor that many of my friends e-mail me daily.
Why have I procrastinated? Well, like most of
you, I felt a little intimidated about the prospect of actually setting
up a network - not the installation of the ethernet cards and hooking up
the CAT 5+ cable - but the software part of setting up the network,
which I've always understood to be tricky. Reading previous Comm Corner
articles about setting up a home network always left me with a glazed
look in my eyes and a further resolve to procrastinate as long as
Marilyn would let me.
Finally, this past Christmas, one of my gifts
to Marilyn under the tree was a Linksys Cable/DSL 4-port router and 30
feet of CAT 5+ cable. I was finally committed to link our two PCs
together.
The week after Christmas, I installed two
D-Link Ethernet cards on each of our PCs. After a quick trip back to
CompUSA to exchange the 30 foot length of CAT 5+ cable I had estimated I
would need for a 50 foot length (strong hint, measure the length around
your room where you plan to string the cable before actually buying
your best guess length).
I hooked up the cable from each PC's Ethernet
card to the Linksys self-powered router, hooked up the cable modem to
the Linksys router using a 3 foot length of CAT 5+ cable and then used
the Setup Wizard on the Linksys CD-ROM provided in the router box. Also
included was a 4-color foldout pamphlet showing a schematic, step by
step setup instructions and color photos of where the cables attached.
The Linksys router now showed little green
lights indicating both PCs were connected and another green light
flashed rapidly mimicking the light on the cable modem showing data
transmission. This was going to be a piece of cake.
|
Immediately upon
initiating the Setup Wizard, I got an error message saying, "My computer
is not connected to the Internet. Please check my Internet connection."
See, I knew this network stuff would be fraught with huge technical
hurdles to jump.
I rechecked each cable connection with the
router. All looked OK. I reran the Setup Wizard. Not OK. I got the same
error message that the darn thing wasn't finding the Internet. If it
wasn't finding the Internet, why was that router green light flashing
rapidly in sync with my modem light?
Since my computer guru Vade Forrester has
always said setting up a network was easy, I decided to invite him over
to help jump the technical hurdles that had suddenly presented
themselves.
Vade tried the Lynksys Setup Wizard and
quickly observed the same error message. He said, "Well, we'll just use
WindowsXP Setup Wizard." Looking over Vade's shoulder, he went to
Control Panel, clicked on Network Setup Wizard and WindowsXP did its
thing.
I had overlooked installing the Ethernet card driver on Marilyn's PC but that was resolved quickly.
It was looking like we were networked. I
brought Marilyn in and asked her to click on the Internet icon on her
PC. She absolutely beamed as she connected to the Internet.
What did this cost me to save my marriage? The
Lynksys 4-port Cable/DSL cost $49.99 at CompUSA. 50 feet of CAT 5+
cable was $15.20 and a 3 foot section was $3.82.
Later that evening, Marilyn looked over at me,
smiled and said, "Thank you for getting me on the Internet." That was
worth 70 bucks any day of the week.
|