Installing the Wireless Adapter

A Wi-Fi adapter connects your computer to the network. If your computer doesn’t already have the adapter that you need built in, you can add one.

Wireless Basics Tip: If you’re lucky enough to have a notebook with built-in Wi-Fi, you won’t need the PC Card adapter.

Install the Wi-Fi adapter in each system that will connect wirelessly to the router. If you’re using the D-Link PC Card and PCI adapters, install the software from the CD before installing the hardware, then shut down your system, install the adapter, and reboot. After Windows boots, the Found New Hardware wizard should appear and initiate the driver installation. Select “Install the software automatically” and click Next. If you see a message warning that the driver has not passed Windows logo testing, click Continue Anyway.

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Sony Vaios try to make a ‘Splash’

(Credit: Sony)

Amid the parade of Sony products announced this morning, it might be easy to get lost in the crowd–unless you happen to be clad in floral patterns of bright pink and blue.

That’s how Sony’s Vaio laptops tried to stand apart, anyway, in the latest iteration of its “Graphic Splash Expression Collection.” Despite the ornate names of the newest crop–which include “Victorian Lace” and “Flora”–it’s actually quite subdued compared with earlier releases that boasted leopard prints and giant polka dots.

The patterns and colors can be mixed and matched, and personal engraving is free for the 1,200 laptops in this limited edition. But perhaps its most distinguishing aspect is under the hood: The keyboards can be customized with three new designer fonts. Other than that, the 15.4-inch widescreen laptops have the usual run of Vaio specs and options.

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Microsoft has High Hopes for Windows Server 2008

Microsoft’s expectations are running high for the upcoming release of Windows Server 2008. Steve Ballmer, the company’s CEO, will officially launch the server software at an event in Los Angeles on Wednesday, capping months of beta testing by customers around the world.

The launch is vitally important to Microsoft, which hopes sales of the updated server software will spur wider adoption of Windows Vista by corporate customers that have so far resisted the urge to upgrade from Windows XP.

“We think with Vista SP1 and Windows Server 2008, the integrated benefits that customers see will really encourage them to start looking at deployments of Vista on the desktop as well,” said Jagan Narendran, the director of Microsoft Asia-Pacific’s Infrastructure Server Business. Read more »

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