- Firewire cards.
- Posted by EtherStreams on May 10th, 2008
Hi. In my computer I've installed an Ethernet card, a dial-up modem and a
firewire card.
-The dial-up modem (56kbps) is used to connect to the internet.
-The Ethernet port will be used for a cross-over cable network.
-The firewire card I wish to use strictly for my external sound card.
Looking at my "Network Connections", my firewire card shows up under "1394
Connection". Looking at it's properties, I see that "Client For Microsoft
Networks", "File And Printer Sharing" and "Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)" are
checked. In my "Device Manager" I find a "1394 Net Adapter".
My questions are:
A) How do I work it that the firewire card is used strictly for the external
soundcard (Presonus Firebox)?
B) If I change the network settings attached to the "1394 Connection", will
it affect my ability to connect to the net via dail-up and network between
computers via the ethernet port? etherstreams@hotmail.com
- Posted by Steve Winograd on May 11th, 2008
On Sat, 10 May 2008 15:21:00 -0700, EtherStreams
<EtherStreams@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
Windows XP supports networking via a computer's FireWire (IEEE 1394)
connection. Since you won't be using it for networking, right-click
and disable the 1394 network connection. Dial-up, Ethernet
networking, and the external sound card will work normally.
--
Best Wishes,
Steve Winograd, MS-MVP (Windows Networking)
Please post any reply as a follow-up message in the news group
for everyone to see. I'm sorry, but I don't answer questions
addressed directly to me in E-mail or news groups.
Microsoft Most Valuable Professional Program
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com
- Should I have multiple firewire cards? (Microsoft Windows) by JNLSeb
- 64 bit firewire cards? (Computer Hardware) by Ward Taylor
- Can't install USB 2 or Firewire cards (Computers & Technology) by Freebie
- Are all firewire cards essentially the same? (Desktops) by Doc
- FireWire CARDS (Computers & Technology) by Al Reese

