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Old June 2nd 04, 09:59 AM
Erik Hegeman
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Hi, thanks for your reply,

Yes, Centrino has built-in WLAN support. I'll go to university in september,
the university (University of Twente, the Netherlands) has a huge wireless
LAN (with 650 access points), and many students use a laptop there. The
university supplies them, last year they were Centrino 1.4GHz laptops with
54mbps integrated WLAN, 512MB DDR, Radeon 9200 graphics I believe, some
things may have been optional, don't know exactly.

150 feet, that would be about 45 meters, which would me more than enough

greetings,
Erik


"Tj" wrote in message
...
Doesn't Centrino have built in wireless on motherboard? Yes it should go
thru wall, about150 feet.

"Erik Hegeman" wrote in message
...
Hi,

I have a home network server which has some shared folders on it's

harddisk
and a shared printer. It also shares the internet connection. It has two
10/100 mbps NIC's (actually they're integrated in the Asus A7N8X-deluxe
mainboard), one of them connects to the wired LAN (actually it connects

to
one other computer using a crossover cable) and one of them connects to

the
DSL modem/router.

Anyway, I am thinking of buying a laptop with Centrino technology with
integrated WLAN, and I am not sure how to connect this to the existing

LAN.

The cheapest woul probably be buying a PCI WLAN card for the server and
setting up an ad-hoc connection. Sweex seems to offer a nice PCI card

with
a
relatively large antenna (http://www.sweex.com/product.asp?pid=223,

don't
know if the 802.11G card also has such an antenna) However, I have no

idea
how far the signal will go without an access point. I would like it to

go
at
least 6 meters and through one concrete wall, but it doesn't have to be

fast
at that distance (1 mbps would be enough). Buying an access point will
probably be better, but they are relatively expensive and of course I

don't
want to throw away money.

Does anyone have experience with the Sweex PCI WLAN cards (or other

cards
with good antennas) and/or can anyone tell me what will be the range of

an
ad-hoc wireless LAN connection? Or should I really buy an access point?

Thanks,
Erik