From: "Neil Waldhauer" Received: from [192.168.100.201] (HELO mail.2rosenthals.com) by 2rosenthals.com (CommuniGate Pro SMTP 5.1.16) with ESMTP id 2326297 for os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com; Fri, 20 Feb 2009 11:58:15 -0500 Received: from static-71-171-102-26.clppva.fios.verizon.net ([71.171.102.26] helo=mail2.2rosenthals.com) by secmgr-ny.randr with esmtps (TLSv1:AES256-SHA:256) (Exim 4.43) id 1LaYhb-0003iL-4k for os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com; Fri, 20 Feb 2009 11:58:15 -0500 Received: from host1.cruzio.com ([63.249.95.131]:54068) by mail2.2rosenthals.com with esmtps (TLSv1:AES256-SHA:256) (Exim 4.69) (envelope-from ) id 1LaYhY-0006CP-1A for os2-wireless_users@2rosenthals.com; Fri, 20 Feb 2009 11:58:12 -0500 Received: (qmail 79912 invoked from network); 20 Feb 2009 08:58:10 -0800 Received: from dsl-63-249-111-252.cruzio.com (HELO 192.168.46.71) (63.249.111.252) by dreamersdeck.com with SMTP; 20 Feb 2009 08:58:10 -0800 X-CTCH-RefID: str=0001.0A010206.499EE124.015A,ss=1,fgs=0 Date: Fri, 20 Feb 2009 08:58:05 -0800 To: "OS/2 Wireless Users Mailing List" In-Reply-To: References: Subject: Re: [OS2Wireless] An old "friend" is back MIME-Version: 1.0 X-Mailer: The Polarbar Mailer; version=1.25d; build=2006 X-Mailer-Platform: OS/2; architecture=x86; version=20.45 X-Mailer-Java-VM: IBM Corporation; version=J2RE 1.3.1 IBM build co131-20060605 (SR10) (JIT enabled: jitc); compiler=jitc Message-ID: On Fri, 20 Feb 2009 08:51:54 -0800, "Ray Davison" wrote: > Neil Waldhauer wrote: > > > > In my case, they weren't broken. They were fine. It was my access point. > > I take that to mean that you had a machine that could not communicate > with the access point, true? > > My problem seems to be that I cannot get out of the LT to see if there > is anything to access. > > Are we talking about the same thing? I don't know what an LT is, or a DT mentioned earlier in your messages. Every single machine could not talk to the access point, because it was using MAC address filtering to lock them out. Neil -- Neil Waldhauer, neil@blondeguy.com Progress (n.): The process through which the Internet has evolved from smart people in front of dumb terminals to dumb people in front of smart terminals.