I recently bought a Dell XPS One with a Broadcom 802.11n Network card
and wireless is slow and unusable.
My home network consists of a Motorola Surfboard cable modem via
Comcast broadband service connected to a Linksys Wireless-N WRT150N
router (configured w/ no WEP or Encryption - it's open) via CAT5E
cable. The LAN has two WiFi-G enabled laptops and w/ Desktop all w/
WinXP Pro working efficiently and flawlessly for over a year. This
Dell XPS One is a new machine introduced.
I connect the Dell XPS One w/ the Broadcom 802.11n Network card and
Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 and the issue begins. BTW, the issues
existed before applying the Vista SP1. For example, downloading a 3mb
file takes over 3 to 5 minutes on this machine via WiFi. In contrast,
on one of the other home LAN machines w/ XP and differant hardware,
this takes less than 30 seconds. Also, I have skipping in YouTube
videos and file copys from machine to machine in the LAN taking
forever.
I checked the Wireless card properties on the offending machine and
all settings look correct - im registering at 130 Mbps speed
consistently according to the WiFi status. I looked at the wireless
card driver and it appears to be the latest, however when I checked
Dell's website it looks like their may be a newer one that arrived
just this month. However, when I download and go to update the driver
in device manager it says that I have the latest (the existing driver)
and does not install the newer one.
One other test I did was to plug in a cat6 ethernet cable from the
router to the back of the machine. It appears that my WRT150N router
only has 100/Full from the LAN ports so I received a 100Mbps
connection vi auto-negotiate setting. This is slower than the 10Mbps
that the WiFi card status was reporting, btw. So, I did a download
from the same site and bam, slower than XP machine, but way faster
than the troubled WiFi connection - maybe 45 seconds to a minutes and
it was done.
Do you think this is a bad WiFi card in the machine, driver issue,
Windows Vista compatability, or any of the above?
Re: Vista Wireless-N Slow to a Crawl Please Help....
"Billy" <UseNewz@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:8289601c-3dbd-456d-afef-71263a20cab5@e53g2000hsa.googlegroups.com...
>I recently bought a Dell XPS One with a Broadcom 802.11n Network card
> and wireless is slow and unusable.
>
> My home network consists of a Motorola Surfboard cable modem via
> Comcast broadband service connected to a Linksys Wireless-N WRT150N
> router (configured w/ no WEP or Encryption - it's open) via CAT5E
> cable. The LAN has two WiFi-G enabled laptops and w/ Desktop all w/
> WinXP Pro working efficiently and flawlessly for over a year. This
> Dell XPS One is a new machine introduced.
>
> I connect the Dell XPS One w/ the Broadcom 802.11n Network card and
> Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 and the issue begins. BTW, the issues
> existed before applying the Vista SP1. For example, downloading a 3mb
> file takes over 3 to 5 minutes on this machine via WiFi. In contrast,
> on one of the other home LAN machines w/ XP and differant hardware,
> this takes less than 30 seconds. Also, I have skipping in YouTube
> videos and file copys from machine to machine in the LAN taking
> forever.
>
> I checked the Wireless card properties on the offending machine and
> all settings look correct - im registering at 130 Mbps speed
> consistently according to the WiFi status. I looked at the wireless
> card driver and it appears to be the latest, however when I checked
> Dell's website it looks like their may be a newer one that arrived
> just this month. However, when I download and go to update the driver
> in device manager it says that I have the latest (the existing driver)
> and does not install the newer one.
>
> One other test I did was to plug in a cat6 ethernet cable from the
> router to the back of the machine. It appears that my WRT150N router
> only has 100/Full from the LAN ports so I received a 100Mbps
> connection vi auto-negotiate setting. This is slower than the 10Mbps
> that the WiFi card status was reporting, btw. So, I did a download
> from the same site and bam, slower than XP machine, but way faster
> than the troubled WiFi connection - maybe 45 seconds to a minutes and
> it was done.
>
> Do you think this is a bad WiFi card in the machine, driver issue,
> Windows Vista compatability, or any of the above?
Re: Vista Wireless-N Slow to a Crawl Please Help....
On May 6, 2:18*pm, "jpsga" <jp...@comcast.net> wrote:
> "Billy" <UseN...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:8289601c-3dbd-456d-afef-71263a20cab5@e53g2000hsa.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
>
>
> >I recently bought a Dell XPS One with a Broadcom 802.11n Network card
> > and wireless is slow and unusable.
>
> > My home network consists of a Motorola Surfboard cable modem via
> > Comcast broadband service connected to a Linksys Wireless-N WRT150N
> > router (configured w/ no WEP or Encryption - it's open) via CAT5E
> > cable. The LAN has two WiFi-G enabled laptops and w/ Desktop all w/
> > WinXP Pro working efficiently and flawlessly for over a year. This
> > Dell XPS One is a new machine introduced.
>
> > I connect the Dell XPS One w/ the Broadcom 802.11n Network card and
> > Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 and the issue begins. BTW, the issues
> > existed before applying the Vista SP1. For example, downloading a 3mb
> > file takes over 3 to 5 minutes on this machine via WiFi. In contrast,
> > on one of the other home LAN machines w/ XP and differant hardware,
> > this takes less than 30 seconds. Also, I have skipping in YouTube
> > videos and file copys from machine to machine in the LAN taking
> > forever.
>
> > I checked the Wireless card properties on the offending machine and
> > all settings look correct - im registering at 130 Mbps speed
> > consistently according to the WiFi status. I looked at the wireless
> > card driver and it appears to be the latest, however when I checked
> > Dell's website it looks like their may be a newer one that arrived
> > just this month. However, when I download and go to update the driver
> > in device manager it says that I have the latest (the existing driver)
> > and does not install the newer one.
>
> > One other test I did was to plug in a cat6 ethernet cable from the
> > router to the back of the machine. It appears that my WRT150N router
> > only has 100/Full from the LAN ports so I received a 100Mbps
> > connection vi auto-negotiate setting. This is slower than the 10Mbps
> > that the WiFi card status was reporting, btw. So, I did a download
> > from the same site and bam, slower than XP machine, but way faster
> > than the troubled WiFi connection - maybe 45 seconds to a minutes and
> > it was done.
>
> > Do you think this is a bad WiFi card in the machine, driver issue,
> > Windows Vista compatability, or any of the above?
>
> Billy-- Is this the Broadcom BC4322?
> Jim- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Jim - without being in front of the machine (im at work) I want to say
"yes" as I recall that driver directory as reference to the drivers
installed. The date I think was 9/2007 or maybe even earlier as driver
stamp. I will confirm all this tonight after 9pm EST from home an post
follow-up. What I was trying to do was to update the driver with the
BCM4321 which btw is a lesser number than you specify but is Dell
recommended on their site under my system and has a release date of
4/11/08 (very recent).
Do you know of an issue with the BC4322 driver and/or hardware? That
would help point me in the direction that I need to go....thanks!
Re: Vista Wireless-N Slow to a Crawl Please Help....
"Billy" <UseNewz@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:c05ca650-5fa3-48a9-8b4b-fb03bc1e9750@8g2000hse.googlegroups.com...
On May 6, 2:18 pm, "jpsga" <jp...@comcast.net> wrote:
> "Billy" <UseN...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:8289601c-3dbd-456d-afef-71263a20cab5@e53g2000hsa.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
>
>
> >I recently bought a Dell XPS One with a Broadcom 802.11n Network card
> > and wireless is slow and unusable.
>
> > My home network consists of a Motorola Surfboard cable modem via
> > Comcast broadband service connected to a Linksys Wireless-N WRT150N
> > router (configured w/ no WEP or Encryption - it's open) via CAT5E
> > cable. The LAN has two WiFi-G enabled laptops and w/ Desktop all w/
> > WinXP Pro working efficiently and flawlessly for over a year. This
> > Dell XPS One is a new machine introduced.
>
> > I connect the Dell XPS One w/ the Broadcom 802.11n Network card and
> > Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 and the issue begins. BTW, the issues
> > existed before applying the Vista SP1. For example, downloading a 3mb
> > file takes over 3 to 5 minutes on this machine via WiFi. In contrast,
> > on one of the other home LAN machines w/ XP and differant hardware,
> > this takes less than 30 seconds. Also, I have skipping in YouTube
> > videos and file copys from machine to machine in the LAN taking
> > forever.
>
> > I checked the Wireless card properties on the offending machine and
> > all settings look correct - im registering at 130 Mbps speed
> > consistently according to the WiFi status. I looked at the wireless
> > card driver and it appears to be the latest, however when I checked
> > Dell's website it looks like their may be a newer one that arrived
> > just this month. However, when I download and go to update the driver
> > in device manager it says that I have the latest (the existing driver)
> > and does not install the newer one.
>
> > One other test I did was to plug in a cat6 ethernet cable from the
> > router to the back of the machine. It appears that my WRT150N router
> > only has 100/Full from the LAN ports so I received a 100Mbps
> > connection vi auto-negotiate setting. This is slower than the 10Mbps
> > that the WiFi card status was reporting, btw. So, I did a download
> > from the same site and bam, slower than XP machine, but way faster
> > than the troubled WiFi connection - maybe 45 seconds to a minutes and
> > it was done.
>
> > Do you think this is a bad WiFi card in the machine, driver issue,
> > Windows Vista compatability, or any of the above?
>
> Billy-- Is this the Broadcom BC4322?
> Jim- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Jim - without being in front of the machine (im at work) I want to say
"yes" as I recall that driver directory as reference to the drivers
installed. The date I think was 9/2007 or maybe even earlier as driver
stamp. I will confirm all this tonight after 9pm EST from home an post
follow-up. What I was trying to do was to update the driver with the
BCM4321 which btw is a lesser number than you specify but is Dell
recommended on their site under my system and has a release date of
4/11/08 (very recent).
Do you know of an issue with the BC4322 driver and/or hardware? That
would help point me in the direction that I need to go....thanks!
Billy-- I *Do not* know of any issue with the BC 4322. I wanted to look at
the manual to see if you can drop back to G speeds. As it occures to me that
the router must be capable of N speeds if it wants to talk to you new card
at that speed.
Jim
Re: Vista Wireless-N Slow to a Crawl Please Help....
On May 6, 2:49*pm, "jpsga" <jp...@comcast.net> wrote:
> "Billy" <UseN...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:c05ca650-5fa3-48a9-8b4b-fb03bc1e9750@8g2000hse.googlegroups.com...
> On May 6, 2:18 pm, "jpsga" <jp...@comcast.net> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > "Billy" <UseN...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> >news:8289601c-3dbd-456d-afef-71263a20cab5@e53g2000hsa.googlegroups.com...
>
> > >I recently bought a Dell XPS One with a Broadcom 802.11n Network card
> > > and wireless is slow and unusable.
>
> > > My home network consists of a Motorola Surfboard cable modem via
> > > Comcast broadband service connected to a Linksys Wireless-N WRT150N
> > > router (configured w/ no WEP or Encryption - it's open) via CAT5E
> > > cable. The LAN has two WiFi-G enabled laptops and w/ Desktop all w/
> > > WinXP Pro working efficiently and flawlessly for over a year. This
> > > Dell XPS One is a new machine introduced.
>
> > > I connect the Dell XPS One w/ the Broadcom 802.11n Network card and
> > > Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 and the issue begins. BTW, the issues
> > > existed before applying the Vista SP1. For example, downloading a 3mb
> > > file takes over 3 to 5 minutes on this machine via WiFi. In contrast,
> > > on one of the other home LAN machines w/ XP and differant hardware,
> > > this takes less than 30 seconds. Also, I have skipping in YouTube
> > > videos and file copys from machine to machine in the LAN taking
> > > forever.
>
> > > I checked the Wireless card properties on the offending machine and
> > > all settings look correct - im registering at 130 Mbps speed
> > > consistently according to the WiFi status. I looked at the wireless
> > > card driver and it appears to be the latest, however when I checked
> > > Dell's website it looks like their may be a newer one that arrived
> > > just this month. However, when I download and go to update the driver
> > > in device manager it says that I have the latest (the existing driver)
> > > and does not install the newer one.
>
> > > One other test I did was to plug in a cat6 ethernet cable from the
> > > router to the back of the machine. It appears that my WRT150N router
> > > only has 100/Full from the LAN ports so I received a 100Mbps
> > > connection vi auto-negotiate setting. This is slower than the 10Mbps
> > > that the WiFi card status was reporting, btw. So, I did a download
> > > from the same site and bam, slower than XP machine, but way faster
> > > than the troubled WiFi connection - maybe 45 seconds to a minutes and
> > > it was done.
>
> > > Do you think this is a bad WiFi card in the machine, driver issue,
> > > Windows Vista compatability, or any of the above?
>
> > Billy-- Is this the Broadcom BC4322?
> > Jim- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
>
> Jim - without being in front of the machine (im at work) I want to say
> "yes" as I recall that driver directory as reference to the drivers
> installed. The date I think was 9/2007 or maybe even earlier as driver
> stamp. I will confirm all this tonight after 9pm EST from home an post
> follow-up. What I was trying to do was to update the driver with the
> BCM4321 which btw is a lesser number than you specify but is Dell
> recommended on their site under my system and has a release date of
> 4/11/08 (very recent).
>
> Do you know of an issue with the BC4322 driver and/or hardware? That
> would help point me in the direction that I need to go....thanks!
>
> Billy-- I *Do not* know of any issue with the BC 4322. I wanted to look at
> the manual to see if you can drop back to G speeds. As it occures to me that
> the router must be capable of N speeds if it wants to talk to you new card
> at that speed.
> Jim- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Yes, the WRT150N router is capable of wireless-N draft specification.
It's a wireless N router. The other machines are using G on the client
end to talk to the N router and far outperform the speed of my newer N-
card within the offending machine. The issue is that not only do the
G's outperform the N card, they topple it by as much as 80% faster.
This is why I know there is something wrong.
Your idea about bumping the N down to G is a good test though to see
if this changes things - If I can only find the darn documentation on
any of this equipment I'd likely be farther ahead. Let me know what
you find......
Re: Vista Wireless-N Slow to a Crawl Please Help....
"Billy" <UseNewz@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:cd5e3a7a-c7e6-4db8-a8cc-78ce5399ecfa@j22g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
On May 6, 2:49 pm, "jpsga" <jp...@comcast.net> wrote:
> "Billy" <UseN...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:c05ca650-5fa3-48a9-8b4b-fb03bc1e9750@8g2000hse.googlegroups.com...
> On May 6, 2:18 pm, "jpsga" <jp...@comcast.net> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > "Billy" <UseN...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> >news:8289601c-3dbd-456d-afef-71263a20cab5@e53g2000hsa.googlegroups.com...
>
> > >I recently bought a Dell XPS One with a Broadcom 802.11n Network card
> > > and wireless is slow and unusable.
>
> > > My home network consists of a Motorola Surfboard cable modem via
> > > Comcast broadband service connected to a Linksys Wireless-N WRT150N
> > > router (configured w/ no WEP or Encryption - it's open) via CAT5E
> > > cable. The LAN has two WiFi-G enabled laptops and w/ Desktop all w/
> > > WinXP Pro working efficiently and flawlessly for over a year. This
> > > Dell XPS One is a new machine introduced.
>
> > > I connect the Dell XPS One w/ the Broadcom 802.11n Network card and
> > > Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 and the issue begins. BTW, the issues
> > > existed before applying the Vista SP1. For example, downloading a 3mb
> > > file takes over 3 to 5 minutes on this machine via WiFi. In contrast,
> > > on one of the other home LAN machines w/ XP and differant hardware,
> > > this takes less than 30 seconds. Also, I have skipping in YouTube
> > > videos and file copys from machine to machine in the LAN taking
> > > forever.
>
> > > I checked the Wireless card properties on the offending machine and
> > > all settings look correct - im registering at 130 Mbps speed
> > > consistently according to the WiFi status. I looked at the wireless
> > > card driver and it appears to be the latest, however when I checked
> > > Dell's website it looks like their may be a newer one that arrived
> > > just this month. However, when I download and go to update the driver
> > > in device manager it says that I have the latest (the existing driver)
> > > and does not install the newer one.
>
> > > One other test I did was to plug in a cat6 ethernet cable from the
> > > router to the back of the machine. It appears that my WRT150N router
> > > only has 100/Full from the LAN ports so I received a 100Mbps
> > > connection vi auto-negotiate setting. This is slower than the 10Mbps
> > > that the WiFi card status was reporting, btw. So, I did a download
> > > from the same site and bam, slower than XP machine, but way faster
> > > than the troubled WiFi connection - maybe 45 seconds to a minutes and
> > > it was done.
>
> > > Do you think this is a bad WiFi card in the machine, driver issue,
> > > Windows Vista compatability, or any of the above?
>
> > Billy-- Is this the Broadcom BC4322?
> > Jim- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
>
> Jim - without being in front of the machine (im at work) I want to say
> "yes" as I recall that driver directory as reference to the drivers
> installed. The date I think was 9/2007 or maybe even earlier as driver
> stamp. I will confirm all this tonight after 9pm EST from home an post
> follow-up. What I was trying to do was to update the driver with the
> BCM4321 which btw is a lesser number than you specify but is Dell
> recommended on their site under my system and has a release date of
> 4/11/08 (very recent).
>
> Do you know of an issue with the BC4322 driver and/or hardware? That
> would help point me in the direction that I need to go....thanks!
>
> Billy-- I *Do not* know of any issue with the BC 4322. I wanted to look at
> the manual to see if you can drop back to G speeds. As it occures to me
> that
> the router must be capable of N speeds if it wants to talk to you new card
> at that speed.
> Jim- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
Yes, the WRT150N router is capable of wireless-N draft specification.
It's a wireless N router. The other machines are using G on the client
end to talk to the N router and far outperform the speed of my newer N-
card within the offending machine. The issue is that not only do the
G's outperform the N card, they topple it by as much as 80% faster.
This is why I know there is something wrong.
Your idea about bumping the N down to G is a good test though to see
if this changes things - If I can only find the darn documentation on
any of this equipment I'd likely be farther ahead. Let me know what
you find......
I didn't find much because I still don't know the model number of the WIFI
card. We were speculating that it is the DCM4322. By the way, did you
disable the NIC in the Dell?
Re: Vista Wireless-N Slow to a Crawl Please Help....
On May 6, 8:29*pm, "jpsga" <jp...@comcast.net> wrote:
> "Billy" <UseN...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> news:cd5e3a7a-c7e6-4db8-a8cc-78ce5399ecfa@j22g2000hsf.googlegroups.com...
> On May 6, 2:49 pm, "jpsga" <jp...@comcast.net> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
> > "Billy" <UseN...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> >news:c05ca650-5fa3-48a9-8b4b-fb03bc1e9750@8g2000hse.googlegroups.com...
> > On May 6, 2:18 pm, "jpsga" <jp...@comcast.net> wrote:
>
> > > "Billy" <UseN...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
>
> > >news:8289601c-3dbd-456d-afef-71263a20cab5@e53g2000hsa.googlegroups.com....
>
> > > >I recently bought a Dell XPS One with a Broadcom 802.11n Network card
> > > > and wireless is slow and unusable.
>
> > > > My home network consists of a Motorola Surfboard cable modem via
> > > > Comcast broadband service connected to a Linksys Wireless-N WRT150N
> > > > router (configured w/ no WEP or Encryption - it's open) via CAT5E
> > > > cable. The LAN has two WiFi-G enabled laptops and w/ Desktop all w/
> > > > WinXP Pro working efficiently and flawlessly for over a year. This
> > > > Dell XPS One is a new machine introduced.
>
> > > > I connect the Dell XPS One w/ the Broadcom 802.11n Network card and
> > > > Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 and the issue begins. BTW, the issues
> > > > existed before applying the Vista SP1. For example, downloading a 3mb
> > > > file takes over 3 to 5 minutes on this machine via WiFi. In contrast,
> > > > on one of the other home LAN machines w/ XP and differant hardware,
> > > > this takes less than 30 seconds. Also, I have skipping in YouTube
> > > > videos and file copys from machine to machine in the LAN taking
> > > > forever.
>
> > > > I checked the Wireless card properties on the offending machine and
> > > > all settings look correct - im registering at 130 Mbps speed
> > > > consistently according to the WiFi status. I looked at the wireless
> > > > card driver and it appears to be the latest, however when I checked
> > > > Dell's website it looks like their may be a newer one that arrived
> > > > just this month. However, when I download and go to update the driver
> > > > in device manager it says that I have the latest (the existing driver)
> > > > and does not install the newer one.
>
> > > > One other test I did was to plug in a cat6 ethernet cable from the
> > > > router to the back of the machine. It appears that my WRT150N router
> > > > only has 100/Full from the LAN ports so I received a 100Mbps
> > > > connection vi auto-negotiate setting. This is slower than the 10Mbps
> > > > that the WiFi card status was reporting, btw. So, I did a download
> > > > from the same site and bam, slower than XP machine, but way faster
> > > > than the troubled WiFi connection - maybe 45 seconds to a minutes and
> > > > it was done.
>
> > > > Do you think this is a bad WiFi card in the machine, driver issue,
> > > > Windows Vista compatability, or any of the above?
>
> > > Billy-- Is this the Broadcom BC4322?
> > > Jim- Hide quoted text -
>
> > > - Show quoted text -
>
> > Jim - without being in front of the machine (im at work) I want to say
> > "yes" as I recall that driver directory as reference to the drivers
> > installed. The date I think was 9/2007 or maybe even earlier as driver
> > stamp. I will confirm all this tonight after 9pm EST from home an post
> > follow-up. What I was trying to do was to update the driver with the
> > BCM4321 which btw is a lesser number than you specify but is Dell
> > recommended on their site under my system and has a release date of
> > 4/11/08 (very recent).
>
> > Do you know of an issue with the BC4322 driver and/or hardware? That
> > would help point me in the direction that I need to go....thanks!
>
> > Billy-- I *Do not* know of any issue with the BC 4322. I wanted to look at
> > the manual to see if you can drop back to G speeds. As it occures to me
> > that
> > the router must be capable of N speeds if it wants to talk to you new card
> > at that speed.
> > Jim- Hide quoted text -
>
> > - Show quoted text -
>
> Yes, the WRT150N router is capable of wireless-N draft specification.
> It's a wireless N router. The other machines are using G on the client
> end to talk to the N router and far outperform the speed of my newer N-
> card within the offending machine. The issue is that not only do the
> G's outperform the N card, they topple it by as much as 80% faster.
> This is why I know there is something wrong.
>
> Your idea about bumping the N down to G is a good test though to see
> if this changes things - If I can only find the darn documentation on
> any of this equipment I'd likely be farther ahead. Let me know what
> you find......
>
> I didn't find much because I still don't know the model number of the WIFI
> card. We were speculating that it is the DCM4322. By the way, did you
> disable the NIC in the Dell?
>
> Jim- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -
It's the Broadcom Wireless (US) WLAN Card, v.4.170.25.14, A00
BCM4321 WLAN driver that is installed.
Re: Vista Wireless-N Slow to a Crawl Please Help....
> "Billy" <UseNewz@hotmail.com> wrote in message
> news:8289601c-3dbd-456d-afef-71263a20cab5@e53g2000hsa.googlegroups.com...
>> I recently bought a Dell XPS One with a Broadcom 802.11n Network card
>> and wireless is slow and unusable.
>>
>> My home network consists of a Motorola Surfboard cable modem via
>> Comcast broadband service connected to a Linksys Wireless-N WRT150N
>> router (configured w/ no WEP or Encryption - it's open) via CAT5E
>> cable. The LAN has two WiFi-G enabled laptops and w/ Desktop all w/
>> WinXP Pro working efficiently and flawlessly for over a year. This
>> Dell XPS One is a new machine introduced.
>>
>> I connect the Dell XPS One w/ the Broadcom 802.11n Network card and
>> Windows Vista Home Premium SP1 and the issue begins. BTW, the issues
>> existed before applying the Vista SP1. For example, downloading a 3mb
>> file takes over 3 to 5 minutes on this machine via WiFi. In contrast,
>> on one of the other home LAN machines w/ XP and differant hardware,
>> this takes less than 30 seconds. Also, I have skipping in YouTube
>> videos and file copys from machine to machine in the LAN taking
>> forever.
>>
>> I checked the Wireless card properties on the offending machine and
>> all settings look correct - im registering at 130 Mbps speed
>> consistently according to the WiFi status. I looked at the wireless
>> card driver and it appears to be the latest, however when I checked
>> Dell's website it looks like their may be a newer one that arrived
>> just this month. However, when I download and go to update the driver
>> in device manager it says that I have the latest (the existing
>> driver) and does not install the newer one.
>>
>> One other test I did was to plug in a cat6 ethernet cable from the
>> router to the back of the machine. It appears that my WRT150N router
>> only has 100/Full from the LAN ports so I received a 100Mbps
>> connection vi auto-negotiate setting. This is slower than the 10Mbps
>> that the WiFi card status was reporting, btw. So, I did a download
>> from the same site and bam, slower than XP machine, but way faster
>> than the troubled WiFi connection - maybe 45 seconds to a minutes and
>> it was done.
>>
>> Do you think this is a bad WiFi card in the machine, driver issue,
>> Windows Vista compatability, or any of the above?
user error and a salesdroids lies......
From Dell
<http://www.dell.com/content/products/productdetails.aspx/xpsdt_one?c=us&l=en&s=dhs&cs=19>
Dell-branded and internally installed Wi-Fi: (802.11 a/b/g/n Draft 2.0)
standard
notice it is *DRAFT*
From linksys
<http://www.linksys.com/servlet/Satellite?c=L_Product_C2&childpagename=US%2FLayout &cid=1175233984378&pagename=Linksys%2FCommon%2FVis itorWrapper&lid=8437836001B01>
The Access Point built into the Router uses the very latest wireless
networking technology: Wireless-N (draft 802.11n)
Notice it is also *DRAFT*
however, drafts do not always talk to each other at full speed, specially
when they are from different manufacturers....
no way in H that wireless will ever ever ever be faster than wired, if you
buy into the numbers the sales people/liars stick in their literature,
claiming an impossible number, that you beleive cause you see some silly
lying number on a driver/on the screen,
and think it must really be that fast cuz it says so, I got a bridge I'll
sell you cheap.... Trust me, it's in writing!
at any rate, set everything to b/g only, it won't waste a lot of time trying
to negotiate a non existant/incompatible n....