Buffistechnology 3: "Press Some Buttons, See What Happens."
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Okay, so my MacBook and my work computer are connected to the same wireless network.
My work laptop calls it [SSID] 2 (and says it's public...hmm...), and Windows says there is no Internet access, but it's connected, and the strength is good.
My MacBook says its attached to [SSID] and as evidenced by posting here, is on the Internet
just
fine.
I'm about to plug the cable into the work box in order to just get shit done, but I'm staring blankly at the Network and Sharing Center--what's wrong? I'm about to change it to a home network, but I'm not even sure when that setting did done got set in the first place.
What kind of router do you have? Could it be an 802.11 n/g and/or 2.4GHz/5GHz thing?
Well, I don't know precisely what the problem was, but forcing the network to Home reconnected it for some reason.
It was initially connected this morning, because I was sending emails and using the soft phone, so I have no idea if it will suddenly and softly go offline again in the future, but your suggestion bears investigation, since that's the difference between {SSID] and [SSID] 2, I think--both the 2.4GHz and 5GHz networks have the same SSID and password for ::handwave:: transparency, and I think the second one Windows hits shows up with the 2.
I have a Linksys E3200. You have no idea how much I love being || this close to that information in Evernote at any moment. It's like I don't need to have my own brain. Which I typed brian. So it's perfect. Which I didn't type prefect, surprisingly.
Some Pixar DVD's have calibration chapters in the extras section. I'm pretty sure Cars and Incredibles did. Not sure of the others. Not as fancy as the test bars and stuff. But helpful. It's more so you can see all the shadows and light in the Pixar movie, but I found it a nice starting point.
And---the wireless internet connectivity went out again on the Windows box. I was in the middle of shit so I didn't have time to fiddle and just plugged in the cable. I will experiment later. But the MacBook is perfectly behaved and on the web just fine.
Should I change the SSID of one of the networks to see if they're connecting to different ones or something?
I'm blank. I can't really see what could be different in a strictly DHCP setup. The client table looks so...innocent.
Okay--this is something I hope is a hugely basic question. I plug in the charger for my Touchpad, which I'm assuming has drained its battery. Normally there's a light next to where the charger cable plugs in that indicates everything's hunky dory. I've checked every connection along the way, nada. I was surfing the web just fine on it three days ago, and I haven't dropped it or poured coffee on it since then....anything obvious I can look at?
Have you tried to reset it?
Also, [link]
Thanks. I'll try those when I get home.
Okay, the fuck. I'm the most helpless newb in the history of every OS. I started the setup of my new MacBook, but the copy of the users and settings from my existing Mac was gonna take 15 hours, so I aborted it.
Now I'm staring at a login screen which demands a password (it is showing my name, and the same picture associated with my user ID on the old machine), but doesn't take the password of my old MacBook. I'm pretty freaking sure I didn't actually get to the point of typing in a password on that computer during its setup anyway.
So what's the deal? How can it not be blank or the one on the original machine? I can't log into my new, unused computer. This is beyond dumb.
If you aborted copying the user you probably have an incomplete home folder and library settings. While the transfer often claims 15 hours at the start it usually takes much less than that. If it were me I'd wipe the drive and do a reinstall of the OS just to make sure I didn't have a corrupted account lingering on the machine.