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Swapping between wireless and wired networking



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 15th 10, 04:51 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Orc
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home network
normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable when it is
plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once connected to the
wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc, the laptop continues
to use the wireless over the wired route.

On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.

Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to change a
setting to make it swap automatically?

Thanks for your help

Orc


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  #2  
Old February 16th 10, 01:56 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Gene E. Bloch[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 148
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

On 2/15/10, Orc posted:
I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home network
normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable when it is
plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once connected to the
wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc, the laptop continues to
use the wireless over the wired route.


On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.


Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to change a
setting to make it swap automatically?


Thanks for your help


Orc


Try rebooting after plugging the cable in, since evidently that works.

--
Gene Bloch 650.366.4267 lettersatblochg.com


  #3  
Old February 16th 10, 03:07 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Orc
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

Thanks
but that's not a very sophisticated solution.
I can just disable the wireless and then restart it but that's not the point
in XP you didn't have to and that seems odd me.
Previously I could swap between wired and wireless without doing any other
action I.E. while the large file was being copied. Now I have to stop the
copy, turn off the wireless and start again.

do you have any other suggestion?

Orc

"Gene E. Bloch" wrote in message
...
On 2/15/10, Orc posted:
I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home
network normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable
when it is plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once
connected to the wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc,
the laptop continues to use the wireless over the wired route.


On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.


Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to
change a setting to make it swap automatically?


Thanks for your help


Orc


Try rebooting after plugging the cable in, since evidently that works.

--
Gene Bloch 650.366.4267 lettersatblochg.com


  #4  
Old February 16th 10, 03:25 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Seth
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 145
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

"Orc" wrote in message
...
Thanks
but that's not a very sophisticated solution.
I can just disable the wireless and then restart it but that's not the
point
in XP you didn't have to and that seems odd me.
Previously I could swap between wired and wireless without doing any other
action I.E. while the large file was being copied. Now I have to stop the
copy, turn off the wireless and start again.



Are you sure it was XP that was doing that and not a utility supplied by the
OEM? I have always used OEM utilities for that on my machines so I can't
remember if XP actually had that built-in.

  #5  
Old February 16th 10, 04:45 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Orc
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

There was no application involved as far as I know

if I was moving a file across the LAN via the wireless and plugged in the
network cable the transfer rate would rise from the wireless rate to the
cabled rate.
watching the task manage I can see the network traffic move from the
wireless graph to the wired and back if unplugged. I have 2 XP machine -
different makes that do this.

If there was some background program outside XP monitoring and controlling
this behavior I'm not aware of it but the machines used different wireless
card (integrated on one usb on the other)

Orc



"Seth" wrote in message
...
"Orc" wrote in message
...
Thanks
but that's not a very sophisticated solution.
I can just disable the wireless and then restart it but that's not the
point
in XP you didn't have to and that seems odd me.
Previously I could swap between wired and wireless without doing any
other action I.E. while the large file was being copied. Now I have to
stop the copy, turn off the wireless and start again.



Are you sure it was XP that was doing that and not a utility supplied by
the OEM? I have always used OEM utilities for that on my machines so I
can't remember if XP actually had that built-in.

  #6  
Old February 16th 10, 05:48 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
SC Tom[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,089
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking


"Orc" wrote in message
...
I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home
network normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable when
it is plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once connected to
the wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc, the laptop
continues to use the wireless over the wired route.

On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.

Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to change
a setting to make it swap automatically?

Thanks for your help

Orc



On my Gateway running Win7 Home Premium 32-bit, when I plug my UTP cable in,
it becomes the primary connection, even with wireless still enabled. If I
open Task Manager and go to the Networking tab, then run one of the internet
speed tests (Speakeasy or Argonne usually), the majority of the activity is
on the UTP connection. I can unplug it, run the test again, and the wireless
(of course) is running. Then when I plug the UTP cable back in and run the
tests, it becomes primary again.
The NIC is a Realtek PCIe FE Family Controller (built-in) and the wireless
is an Intel Wireless Wi-Fi Link 4965AGN. There's only one icon in the system
tray, unlike my old Compaq which had an icon for each connection (although I
had XP Home on it). You might want to check your laptop's website for any
driver updates for Win7, although I'm not too sure that would be much help.
Gateway has no Win7 drivers for mine- I had to rely on Vista drivers.
--
SC Tom

  #7  
Old February 16th 10, 06:07 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Orc
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

Thanks
I've set the wired network for priority but that doesn't change the behavior
of staying with the wireless when the cable is plugged in during the
transfer

Orc

"The Seabat" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 15 Feb 2010 16:51:21 -0000, "Orc" wrote:

I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home
network
normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable when it is
plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once connected to the
wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc, the laptop
continues
to use the wireless over the wired route.

On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.

Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to
change a
setting to make it swap automatically?

Thanks for your help

Orc


Go to Network connections (quickest way is to just type it in the
address bar). Next, press alt and let go, then go to Advanced, and
click Advanced Settings. You should be able to reorder the preference
of connections.
--
The seabat
Filtering GoogleGroups & Goobers with extreme prejudice!
Usenet Improvement Project: R.I.P. Lee aka Blinky the Shark


  #8  
Old February 16th 10, 06:10 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Orc
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

Thanks,

It could we be an issue with the network cards and drivers rather that Win 7
then.
(my apologies to Microsoft if it is)
I'll see if there are any newer dell drivers - but won't hold my breathe!)

Cheers

Orc

"SC Tom" wrote in message
...

"Orc" wrote in message
...
I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home
network normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable when
it is plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once connected
to the wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc, the laptop
continues to use the wireless over the wired route.

On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.

Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to
change a setting to make it swap automatically?

Thanks for your help

Orc



On my Gateway running Win7 Home Premium 32-bit, when I plug my UTP cable
in, it becomes the primary connection, even with wireless still enabled.
If I open Task Manager and go to the Networking tab, then run one of the
internet speed tests (Speakeasy or Argonne usually), the majority of the
activity is on the UTP connection. I can unplug it, run the test again,
and the wireless (of course) is running. Then when I plug the UTP cable
back in and run the tests, it becomes primary again.
The NIC is a Realtek PCIe FE Family Controller (built-in) and the wireless
is an Intel Wireless Wi-Fi Link 4965AGN. There's only one icon in the
system tray, unlike my old Compaq which had an icon for each connection
(although I had XP Home on it). You might want to check your laptop's
website for any driver updates for Win7, although I'm not too sure that
would be much help. Gateway has no Win7 drivers for mine- I had to rely on
Vista drivers.
--
SC Tom

  #9  
Old February 16th 10, 06:47 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Orc
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

I've checked the drivers,

the wireless card was up to date but the wired card wasn't so that is now up
to date

testing again and the same behavior exists when plugging or unplugging the
network cable.

Thanks for the suggestion

Orc

"SC Tom" wrote in message
...

"Orc" wrote in message
...
I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home
network normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable when
it is plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once connected
to the wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc, the laptop
continues to use the wireless over the wired route.

On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.

Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to
change a setting to make it swap automatically?

Thanks for your help

Orc



On my Gateway running Win7 Home Premium 32-bit, when I plug my UTP cable
in, it becomes the primary connection, even with wireless still enabled.
If I open Task Manager and go to the Networking tab, then run one of the
internet speed tests (Speakeasy or Argonne usually), the majority of the
activity is on the UTP connection. I can unplug it, run the test again,
and the wireless (of course) is running. Then when I plug the UTP cable
back in and run the tests, it becomes primary again.
The NIC is a Realtek PCIe FE Family Controller (built-in) and the wireless
is an Intel Wireless Wi-Fi Link 4965AGN. There's only one icon in the
system tray, unlike my old Compaq which had an icon for each connection
(although I had XP Home on it). You might want to check your laptop's
website for any driver updates for Win7, although I'm not too sure that
would be much help. Gateway has no Win7 drivers for mine- I had to rely on
Vista drivers.
--
SC Tom

  #10  
Old February 16th 10, 06:48 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
SC Tom[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 4,089
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

You're welcome. Sorry it didn't work for you.
--
SC Tom

"Orc" wrote in message
...
I've checked the drivers,

the wireless card was up to date but the wired card wasn't so that is now
up to date

testing again and the same behavior exists when plugging or unplugging the
network cable.

Thanks for the suggestion

Orc

"SC Tom" wrote in message
...

"Orc" wrote in message
...
I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home
network normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable
when it is plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once
connected to the wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc,
the laptop continues to use the wireless over the wired route.

On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.

Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to
change a setting to make it swap automatically?

Thanks for your help

Orc



On my Gateway running Win7 Home Premium 32-bit, when I plug my UTP cable
in, it becomes the primary connection, even with wireless still enabled.
If I open Task Manager and go to the Networking tab, then run one of the
internet speed tests (Speakeasy or Argonne usually), the majority of the
activity is on the UTP connection. I can unplug it, run the test again,
and the wireless (of course) is running. Then when I plug the UTP cable
back in and run the tests, it becomes primary again.
The NIC is a Realtek PCIe FE Family Controller (built-in) and the
wireless is an Intel Wireless Wi-Fi Link 4965AGN. There's only one icon
in the system tray, unlike my old Compaq which had an icon for each
connection (although I had XP Home on it). You might want to check your
laptop's website for any driver updates for Win7, although I'm not too
sure that would be much help. Gateway has no Win7 drivers for mine- I had
to rely on Vista drivers.
--
SC Tom


  #11  
Old February 16th 10, 07:56 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Roy Smith[_6_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 658
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

On 2/15/2010 10:51 AM, Orc wrote:
I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home
network normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable
when it is plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once
connected to the wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc,
the laptop continues to use the wireless over the wired route.

On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.

Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to
change a setting to make it swap automatically?

Thanks for your help


Just so you don't feel left out, you're not the only one that's noticed
this same behavior. This happens with my laptop as well and it didn't
happen with Windows XP. So I Googled WIndows 7 network priority and
came across this:

1. Click the Start Button
2. Right Click "Network" and then left Click Properties
3. From the "Network And Sharing Center" window click "Change Adapter
Settings"
4. On the "Network Connections" window, press the ALT key on your
keyboard to bring up
the menu bar
5. Click the "Advanced" menu and then "Advanced Settings"
6. In the "Advanced Settings" window you will see the "Adapters and
Bindings" tab and under
"Connections" you will see the order they are in, you can use the
arrows to the side to
move the connection priority up and down.

Now reboot, and after the pc has restarted your wired lan card will have
a higher priority over the wireless card. Both will still connect, but
the wired lan card will get all the network traffic when it's network
cable is plugged in.

--

Roy Smith
Windows 7 Home Premium

Timestamp: Tuesday, February 16, 2010 1:56:01 PM
  #12  
Old February 16th 10, 08:16 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Roy Smith[_6_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 658
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

On 2/15/2010 10:51 AM, Orc wrote:
I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home
network normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable
when it is plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once
connected to the wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc,
the laptop continues to use the wireless over the wired route.

On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.

Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to
change a setting to make it swap automatically?

Thanks for your help


To add to this, I've come across a small program that will automatically
switch between your Wireless and Wired network cards. It comes with a
30 day trial, and it only costs $7.95 (USD) for the registered version.
You can get it he

http://www.wirelessautoswitch.com/

--

Roy Smith
Windows 7 Home Premium

Timestamp: Tuesday, February 16, 2010 2:16:02 PM

  #13  
Old February 16th 10, 10:36 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Gene E. Bloch[_3_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 148
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

My apologies. I should have realized that sophistication was more
important than function.

On 2/16/10, Orc posted:
Thanks
but that's not a very sophisticated solution.
I can just disable the wireless and then restart it but that's not the point
in XP you didn't have to and that seems odd me.
Previously I could swap between wired and wireless without doing any other
action I.E. while the large file was being copied. Now I have to stop the
copy, turn off the wireless and start again.


do you have any other suggestion?


Orc


"Gene E. Bloch" wrote in message
...
On 2/15/10, Orc posted:
I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home
network normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable when
it is plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once connected
to the wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc, the laptop
continues to use the wireless over the wired route.


On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.


Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to change
a setting to make it swap automatically?


Thanks for your help


Orc


Try rebooting after plugging the cable in, since evidently that works.

-- Gene Bloch 650.366.4267 lettersatblochg.com



--
Gene Bloch 650.366.4267 lettersatblochg.com


  #14  
Old February 17th 10, 05:52 AM posted to alt.windows7.general
Yousuf Khan[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 2,447
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

Seth wrote:
"Orc" wrote in message
...
Thanks
but that's not a very sophisticated solution.
I can just disable the wireless and then restart it but that's not the
point
in XP you didn't have to and that seems odd me.
Previously I could swap between wired and wireless without doing any
other action I.E. while the large file was being copied. Now I have to
stop the copy, turn off the wireless and start again.



Are you sure it was XP that was doing that and not a utility supplied by
the OEM? I have always used OEM utilities for that on my machines so I
can't remember if XP actually had that built-in.


I'll confirm what Orc said, I've done what he said, which is to simply
unplug the cable, or replug it in, and it would quickly switch over to
preferring the wired ethernet connection over the unwired one.

Yousuf Khan
  #15  
Old February 17th 10, 05:11 PM posted to alt.windows7.general
Orc
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 14
Default Swapping between wireless and wired networking

No problem, but rebooting didn't achieve the objective of switching
"seamlessly" between wired and wireless networks while in the process of
down loading a file and was one stage worse that the option I had already
explored of temporarily disabling the wireless receiver.


"Gene E. Bloch" wrote in message
...
My apologies. I should have realized that sophistication was more
important than function.

On 2/16/10, Orc posted:
Thanks
but that's not a very sophisticated solution.
I can just disable the wireless and then restart it but that's not the
point
in XP you didn't have to and that seems odd me.
Previously I could swap between wired and wireless without doing any
other action I.E. while the large file was being copied. Now I have to
stop the copy, turn off the wireless and start again.


do you have any other suggestion?


Orc


"Gene E. Bloch" wrote in message
...
On 2/15/10, Orc posted:
I have a wireless enabled Windows 7 laptop which connects to my home
network normally when the network cable is unplugged or via the cable
when it is plugged in from boot. If I plug the network cable once
connected to the wireless, to gain extra speed when copying files etc,
the laptop continues to use the wireless over the wired route.

On my XP machines it would switch seamlessly to the fastest.

Is this a new and undocumented feature of windows 7 or do I need to
change a setting to make it swap automatically?

Thanks for your help

Orc

Try rebooting after plugging the cable in, since evidently that works.

-- Gene Bloch 650.366.4267 lettersatblochg.com



--
Gene Bloch 650.366.4267 lettersatblochg.com


 




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