Broadband Internet connection and modem. A broadband Internet connection is a high-speed Internet connection. Digital Subscriber Line (DSL) and cable are two of the most common broadband connections. You can get a broadband connection by contacting an Internet service provider (ISP). Typically, ISPs that provide DSL are telephone companies and ISPs that provide cable are cable TV companies. ISPs frequently offer broadband modems. Some ISPs also offer combination modem/wireless routers. You can also find these at computer or electronics stores, and online.

Position the wireless router off the floor and away from walls and metal objects, such as metal file cabinets. The fewer physical obstructions between your PC and the router's signal, the more likely that you'll be using the router's full signal strength.


My Wifi Router Free Download For Windows 7


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Change the default user name and password. This helps protect your router. Most router manufacturers have a default user name and password on the router and a default network name (also known as the SSID). Someone could use this info to access your router without you knowing it. To help avoid that, change the default user name and password for your router. See the documentation for your device for instructions.

Set up a security key (password) for your network. Wireless networks have a network security key to help protect them from unauthorized access. We recommend using Wi-Fi Protected Access 3 (WPA3) security if your router and PC support it. See the documentation for your router for more detailed info, including what type of security is supported and how to set it up.

I bought a Nighthawk AX6000 (RAX80) WiFi router. All my devices (TiVo, Roku, iPad, iPhone, Android phone, Surface Tablet) connected without issue. None of my ASUS Windows 10 Laptops with the Intel Dual Band Wireless-AC 7265 WiFi card could see the SSID being broadcast by the router. Netgear tech support could not figure it out. I exchanged it (thinking it could be one bad router) but the new one behaved exactly the same way.

Ultimately, I downloaded the Intel ProSet diagnostic application, which recommended and installed a new driver. Then I could see the SSID (but still could not connect). After some combination of rebooting the PC and rebooting the router, I am now on line (I had three laptops and had to go through this three times!)

I too had this issue with my new RAX80 on one HP laptop with an intel chipset. My solution was to go to Intels site and download the recomended driver update. After update and reboot the laptop saw the RAX80's wifi ssid. I have over 30 devices connecting and that was the only one i had issue with.

All my devices (TiVo, Roku, iPad, iPhone, Android phone, Surface Tablet) connected without issue. None of my ASUS Windows 10 Laptops with the Intel Dual Band Wireless-AC 7265 WiFi card could see the SSID being broadcast by the router.

That is a fair question, and one I glossed over. These two-year-old ASUS laptops have been happily connecting to my older Netgear WiFi router ... I replaced it because it started dropping connections. I was greatly surprised and puzzled at the difficulty with the new router.

With the bridge in place, I connected another PC to the router via an Ethernet cable. On that computer, IP addresses shown on the Router configuration page (192.168.1.2) seemed to be the right ones. However there was no internet connectivity on that computer as well.

Was trying to do same thing.I bought a 3G/4G Router (TP-Link MR3420)that has 4 Ethernet LAN Ports and one WAN port. The manual that came along with the Router asks to connect a Broadband (Cable/xDSL) modem to the WAN port. However, I do NOT have a Broadband modem. Initially I used a 4G USB modem to connect to the internet via router USB port but I needed to share My Mobile 4G internet with router via USB Tether. This is how I did it..

Now from another laptop or mobile log in to router admin page under WAN setting Detect the WAN Connection Type and let it refresh the following settingsIP Address:

192.168.xx.xxxSubnet Mask:

255.255.255.0Default Gateway:

192.168.xx.yyy

Suppose you have internet connectivity in Ethernet5, and you want to share it to Ethernet1. When sharing, windows automatically sets the IPv4 address of Ethernet1 to 192.168.137.1. (you need to connect the Ethernet1 LAN of PC to WAN of router, and set 'automatically get IP address' option in router settings).

My WIFI Router has your laptop (or wireless-capable desktop) emulate a network router complete with most features. This lets you share Internet connected devices and a few other things too with anyone who connects. It also has basic security features and more than a few other nice frills!

My WIFI Router has some surprisingly strong features for such a simple piece of software many stemming from it creating a fully-fledged network router. For example you and those on the network you create can all watch videos via My Videos and individually control your playback: perfect for long road trips with laptops but no Internet access. It's even possible to move files to and fro if that's your pleasure. Even without Internet the app is useful but it's great for sharing your 4G Internet with others for example. Just keep one thing in mind: leaving an open router is risky for security reasons and My WIFI Router doesn't provide a ton of high-grade security options. At least there's a blacklist.

Overall My WIFI Router is best for those who just want to use their laptop to share Internet and other things and don't have much cause to worry about interlopers. It's easy to use and has a great video sharing feature so long as security is not a concern (like the road trip example above) this is a great routerising option.

My WIFI Router, a free virtual WiFi router software, can convert your Windows XP, 7 & 8 laptop/PC into a WiFi Hotspot with one click. You can easily share the internet connection and video with your friends and peers anytime and anywhere.

MyPublicWiFi is an easy-to-use software that turns your laptop/tablet/PC into a Wi-Fi wireless access point or Multifunctional Hotspot. Anyone nearby can surf the Internet through your sharing. This is also an ideal solution for setting up a temporary Access Point in a hotel room,meeting room,at home or the like. By enabling user authentication, Customers will be redirected to your login page to authenticate with access password, Voucher Code or accept the Terms Of Use before getting the Internet access. The MyPblicWiFi-Firewall can be used to restrict user access to specific servers. You can also prevent the use of certain Internet services (e.g. file sharing programs) or block the use of social media networks (e.g. Facebook). MyPublicWiFi turn your PC into an Adblock Router. Advertising blocker are an effective way to save your internet bandwidth and protect the privacy of your user. The Bandwidth Manager helps you to control download and upload rate for your hotspot clients. MyPublicWiFi allows you to record and track all visited url pages on your virtual WiFi-Hotspot. Mypublicwifi allows you to set up port forwarding, is available in 19 languages, can be used without a Internet connection and supports the "Hosted Network" and "WiFi Direct for Windows 10/11".

Configured Windows Server 2016 to serve DHCP for all LAN devices. The ISP Router was the DHCP server. I need to turn off router DHCP but would first like to understand how to configure the WiFi portion of the network for non-LAN devices. If I turn of DHCP in the router WiFi stops working and I cannot determine or find why.I've allocated a narrow pool of lease IPs for LAN devices - 100-200. Should I configure wireless devices to pull from same pool or separate designated pool served from Windows server (or still served from router?)? 


You could be running into a router that only enables its wireless if its own DHCP is on. I ran into a pseudo-client's router years ago that would not connect wireless devices unless it was the DHCP server. The way I found out was when this pseudo-client replaced their LAN router without telling me (hence the name I call them), and then devices started falling off of the LAN. The Windows 2012 R2 server's DHCP was still on, but the router's DHCP answered first (especially on IPv6), so some computers got different IPs or got the router as DNS due to IPv6 precedence over IPv4. When I disabled that new router's DHCP, its wireless turned off. Fortunately, I have forgotten the brand of router...it was not a big name consumer one.


If your router is capable of VLANs and does NOT disable the wireless when its DHCP is off, you should be able to let the Windows server handle LAN DHCP, then let the router do it for separate VLANs such as guest SSIDs.


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