January 2003 - IEEE Mentor

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Transcript January 2003 - IEEE Mentor

January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Electronic Attendance and Server
Update
Tim Godfrey
IEEE 802.11 WG Secretary
Al Petrick
IEEE 802.11 Vice-Chair
Submission
Slide 1
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Pluto’s Home Page
Everyone must sign
in as “become a member”
Submission
Slide 2
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Pluto’s Home Page
Enter email address
And Password
Submission
Slide 3
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Pluto’s Home Page
Submission
Slide 4
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Pluto’s Home Page
Submission
Slide 5
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Pluto’s Home Page
Enter contact information
Submission
Slide 6
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Pluto’s Home Page
Submission
Slide 7
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Wireless Network Information
• Both 802.11a and 802.11b networks are available
• SSID (case sensitive)
– IEEE
• Enable DHCP in the Netcard’s TCP/IP properties
– “Obtain IP Address Automatically”
• No WEP is being used. Be sure your WEP is disabled.
• Outgoing SMTP Server is 10.0.1.1 (for this meeting)
10 November
2002 v1
Submission
Slide 8
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Server information
• 802.11 Servers
– PLUTO (10.0.1.3)
• Shared Drives
– 802.11-subm (writable) contains TO_DOC_KEEPER folder
– 802.11-docs (read only) contains all meeting documents
• 802.15: 802-15-server
(10.0.1.15)
– Incoming (writable) for submissions
– Documents (read only) contains all meeting documents
Submission
Slide 9
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Attendance Server
• Attendance Book and Document Number
Server: PLUTO
– Access in web browser as: http://PLUTO/
– Static IP at 10.0.1.3
Submission
Slide 10
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Other Server Information
• 802.16: Mercury 10.0.1.16
• 802.17: 10.0.1.17
• 802.18, 19, and 20: 802-18-19
–
–
–
–
Submission
802.18 Radio Regulatory
802.19 Coexistence
802.20 MBWA
802.20 MBWA
(10.0.1.18)
\\802-18-19\RadioReg
\\802-18-19\Coexistance
\\802-18-19\MBWA
\\802-18-19\MBWA-Subm
Slide 11
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Windows NT/2000/XP Users
•
•
You cannot log on as yourself in your LAN domain and get access
Method 1:
–
–
–
–
•
Method 2:
–
–
•
Go to Passwords and Users in Control Panel and set up a new persona with access to only your
computer (and set its password)
Log out and back in as the new persona
Use Find files, folders…. to find computer
Search for \\pluto or \\802-15-server
From command line: net use \\pluto /user:guest
After this network browsing, etc will work
“”
Method 3:
–
–
–
Submission
Right click "My Computer", -> map network drive, at editbox Folder: \\pluto\documents and/or
\\pluto\802.11
Select "connect using different username and password. In dialog set username as guest,
password is blank. Select ok, select finish on map network drive dialog.
This information is not remembered so will need to be done on each boot of the machine.
Slide 12
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Connecting to Servers
• Windows 98, Windows ME
– Make sure you have logged into your computer with
a valid name.
• If your start menu says “Log Off …” you will not be able
to connect. It should show “Log Off <name>”
– From Windows Explorer, options are
• Browse for pluto or 802-15-server in workgroup IEEE802
in your “Network Neighborhood”
• Use “Find Computer” to find \\pluto or \\802-15-server
• Use Tools / Map Network Drive
– Map drives to \\pluto\802.11 and \\pluto\Documents
Submission
Slide 13
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
Troubleshooting
• If you can’t access or find a particular server
– Ping it – is the address being pinged in some other range than our
local network 10.0.x.x? Is the name being pinged something like
pluto.yourcompany.com? That means you have some other host with
the same name on your home network.
– To solve, run: IPCONFIG /flushdns from a command prompt to flush
your DNS cache.
• If you are denied access to Pluto for files
– For Win 2K / XP, try forcing different credentials
• Method 1 from Explorer: Map Network Drive, click on “connect using a
different user name” : Select user “guest”, pw “guest”.
• Method 2 CMD line: NET USE N: \\pluto\802.11-docs /user:guest
guest
– For Win9x you can’t change users. You have to log off and log on
again as “guest”.
Submission
Slide 14
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil
January 2003
doc.: IEEE 802.11-03/044r0
New Server Names
Old Name
New Name
Venus1
802-11-server
Mars
802-15-server
Neptune
802-18-19
Pluto
Still Pluto (for now)
• Turn off shared drives!!!
• Update virus protection !!!
Submission
Slide 15
Al Petrick, IceFyre, Tim Godfrey, Intersil