QUOTE
I have the official xbox wireless adapter and a 802.11b network, and the same unreliability is present. Long connect times, dropped signal mid game, sometimes the internet doesnt exist, etc.
I would like to know if a G network would fair any better.
It may not necessarily be your wireless network. First of all, wireless b can send data at up to 11Mbps, but your live connection will only ever be as fast as your internet connection. I don't know anyone who has a 11Mbps downstream. Long connect times may be a poor signal or interference. Go into the advance connection settings in your dash. Select wireless. That will show you how strong your connection is and if it's operating at full speed.
Wireless b and g both run at 2.4ghz. So do microwaves and most cordless phones, so if you live in an apartment building you could get a lot of interference. Also, those dropped games may not be you. I could be other users or the server itself. You never really know. Check your signal.
My buddy's xbox is run throughport on his network with a 3Mbps downstream/500Kbps upstream and we still get lag and dropped games. Mine is on wireless g with 128bit encryption and I don't notice anymore lag than at his house. Wireless g isn't anymore reliable than wireless b, just faster transfer rates between your pc/router and your xbox.
This post has been edited by dalime: Jan 29 2005, 04:01 AM
QUOTE(aaahlex @ Feb 13 2005, 08:59 PM)
On the Linksys Wireless gameadapter:
Set to In (infrastructure mode)
Switch set to X, not too II (If I set it to II than weather and RSS on Xbox don't work anymore)
Static IP set to 192.168.1.160 (deliberately set outside the DCHP-range of the accesspoint)
SSID set to 'Any' (default setting)
Hrmm not sure what Linksys game adapter you have, but I have the 802.11g one, and it doesnt grab an address of its own, it just sorta acts as a bridge. I did have to plug it into a computer and use a windows setup utility, but that was just to set the SSID.
No problems here...wish I had a fix for you, perhaps a new firmware for the thing?
Hi Alex,
I've grabbed one of these recently and my experiences match yours (though it was the ISA server I'm connecting to that is at fault - not the Wireless Bridge!)
I'll try to point you in the right directions here (what worked for me!)
QUOTE(aaahlex @ Feb 14 2005, 06:59 AM)
On the accesspoint:
Linksys BEFW11S4
wireless b is working (I also have a wireless laptop without problems)
set to DCHP, range: 192.168.1.100 to 192.168.1.50, no WEP, no SSID (so unsafe, but I don't care)
IP of the accesspoint: 192.168.1.1
This is the root - no real probs here; though you could try setting a SSID here to identify your network... you'll see why in a sec...
QUOTE(aaahlex @ Feb 14 2005, 06:59 AM)
On the Linksys Wireless gameadapter:
Set to In (infrastructure mode)
Switch set to X, not too II (If I set it to II than weather and RSS on Xbox don't work anymore)
Static IP set to 192.168.1.160 (deliberately set outside the DCHP-range of the accesspoint)
SSID set to 'Any' (default setting)
Setting to In is the best way to get this to work - setting to X means you've used a straight cable (non crossover - why it's this way I've got no idea!!) and setting outside the DHCP scope is essential, though truth be told, the advertised IP will be the XBOX's. You'll also need to set the SSID to match the accesspoint via the CD that came with the adaptor.
QUOTE(aaahlex @ Feb 14 2005, 06:59 AM)
On the Xbox:
Static IP 192.168.1.106 (If I try dynamic, than the xbox does not get an IP)
Netmask: 255.255.255.0
gateway: 192.168.1.1 (this is the IP of the accesspoint! Is that ok?)
DNS: 192.168.1.1 (is that ok?)
HTTP proxy: no
internet info: yes (don't know what this is for!)
FTP-server: yes
Time synchro: yes
webserver: yes
webserver port: 80
webserver password: none
Okay, here's where you may be hitting some strife. The IP Address is not good. Set it outside of the DHCP Scope (192.168.1.99 will work); Your gateway setting is spot on - needs to be set to the accesspoint's IP Address (as all IP Traffic will route through it) Set the DNS to the same as what your PC is set to - if it's a dynamic one from a CMD prompt, run IPCONFIG /ALL to show it; think the router will act as one but it may be inheriting your ISP's (in either case, set the XBOX's DNS to match the PC)
If all of this works you should be able to reboot the XBOX and see the RSS News ticker and the weather. Even better, you should be able to PING the XBOX on the IP of the XBOX (forget the Wireless adaptor's IP Address - think it's only used to web configure it) But you will also need to add a SSID to your computer so that it's all on the same loop - I'm running an AD HOC at home and it's working a treat this way. Good luck!
Ads.