Hi, What are you using to secure the network? If using MAC authentication, is the laptop MAC address in the approved list on the access point? Are all encryption settings set correctly? Doubt it is a sick chip. Thanks. Andrew. -----Original Message----- From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Mike Cassidy Sent: 22 May 2005 09:43 To: Access-UK Subject: [access-uk] Loss of connectivity Hi, I have a healthy wireless network, but a daughter's laptop that won't receive; it says there is no available connection. It is a 1.4 ghz Intel Centrino; I've checked all the device drivers and all is said to be working properly. I'm now mystified; could it be a sick chip? Fortunately, still under guarantee! Any help welcome, Regards, Mike UK ** To leave the list, click on the immediately-following link:- ** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe] ** If this link doesn't work then send a message to: ** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ** and in the Subject line type ** unsubscribe ** For other list commands such as vacation mode, click on the ** immediately-following link:- ** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=faq] ** or send a message, to ** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the Subject:- faq ** To leave the list, click on the immediately-following link:- ** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=unsubscribe] ** If this link doesn't work then send a message to: ** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ** and in the Subject line type ** unsubscribe ** For other list commands such as vacation mode, click on the ** immediately-following link:- ** [mailto:access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx?subject=faq] ** or send a message, to ** access-uk-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with the Subject:- faq