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From: Katheyk on 2 May 2008 13:08 Is there a way (via registry or otherwise) to force my Cisco wireless adapter to only connect to/recognize 802.11a wireless networks?
From: Phillip Windell on 2 May 2008 13:58 It is only going to connect to the ones you tell it to connect to. It cannot connect to anything where the security on the client-side has not be configured. -- Phillip Windell www.wandtv.com The views expressed, are my own and not those of my employer, or Microsoft, or anyone else associated with me, including my cats. ----------------------------------------------------- "Katheyk" <Katheyk(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:7DA92CFC-4856-4ED9-89E4-F19FED9E20AD(a)microsoft.com... > Is there a way (via registry or otherwise) to force my Cisco wireless > adapter > to only connect to/recognize 802.11a wireless networks?
From: Jack (MVP-Networking). on 2 May 2008 17:26 Hi You can not block the system from recognizing all signal that it is capable of recognizing. You might be able to restrict it to a with the original vendor utility or if there is a choice entry in the Wireless card's properties ( http://www.ezlan.net/example/powersave.jpg ). Jack (MVP-Networking). "Katheyk" <Katheyk(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:7DA92CFC-4856-4ED9-89E4-F19FED9E20AD(a)microsoft.com... > Is there a way (via registry or otherwise) to force my Cisco wireless > adapter > to only connect to/recognize 802.11a wireless networks?
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