WRT54G & Adventures in wireless
A couple of weeks ago I (finally) received my laptop from work (Dell Latitude D610) after waiting nearly six months. My company pretty much rolls around the clock so often things transpire during off hours. I generally work fairly normal business hours, but a lot of the people I work with do not. Having the laptop allows me to check-in from home in the evening with very little effort and thus avoiding getting blindsided in the morning. It also allows me a lot of flexibility when working from home or wherever. That is, once I got a wireless connection working for it…
I've had reliable DSL service since that finally was resolved. But that was one computer connected straight to the DSL modem (Westell 6100). Thus the first thing was acquiring a wireless router. In an amazing stroke of luck, one of my employees was looking to unload a LinkSys WRT54G…for $20. A great deal as most of the used ones I saw were selling for at least $40.
Cool, lets hook it up. Wham, bam, uh, not quite ma'am. Got my desktop system connected, and I could get to the configuration interface, but no internet access. Thus begins a number of rounds of connecting and disconnecting the router so I could access the internets for some help. After a bit of searching I learned something important about my DSL connection that I didn't know…it's running PPPoE and the modem is also a router. This means that I needed to run it in bridge mode and let the WRT handle all of the connection details. Which then meant I had to find out how to do that. Thus more searching, more forum reading and I finally found a couple of answer that were similar and promising. Using the tried and true trial and error method I finally got the Westell configured, the WRT connected and internet access working. Actually I should say I got it mostly working. …more