2. The computer does not recognize the
Wireless PCI Adapter
.
•
Make sure that the
Wireless PCI Adapter
is properly seated in the computer’s PCI bus
slot.
•
If Windows does not detect the hardware upon insertion of the card, make sure to
completely remove drivers that were previously installed. To remove the drivers, do the
following:
A.
Under
Control Panel
> select
Folder Option
> select
View
> under
Hidden files
and folders
> select
Show hidden files and folders
.
B.
Uncheck
Hide extension for known file types
> click on
Apply
.
C.
Search for the files
N3AB.sys
and
netN3AB.inf
. Remove these files from the
INF
and
SYSTEM32
(DRIVERS) folders in the Windows directory. Note: Windows
XP and Windows 2000 will rename
netN3AB.inf
that have not received
certification into
oem.inf
files (e.g.,
oem1.inf.)
.
3. The Wireless PCI Adapter does not work properly after the driver is
installed.
•
Restart
the computer. (In some cases, it will be necessary to restart the computer after
installing the drivers.)
•
In Windows XP, go to
Start
>
Control Panel
>
System
>
Hardware
Tab
> click on the
Device
Manager
Tab
> click on
Network Cards
> double click on The
IEEE 802.11g PCI Card
Wireless Network Adapter
> make sure that
“This device is working properly”
is
displayed under
Device Status
under the
General
Tab
.
•
If the device is not working properly and a yellow exclamation mark is displayed, then there
is probably a resource conflict. In this case, make sure the computer system has a free
IRQ and if necessary, uninstall the drivers, restart the system, and repeat the driver
installation procedure.
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