I have SBS2003 & XP SP2 clients. Clients connect to the network quite happily
once logged in but will not during start up. This means Clients won't use
their roaming profiles. They all worked perfectly under WEP and when Open.
Any ideas please?

Re: WPA-PSK client slow to connect by smlunatick

smlunatick
Mon Apr 21 10:56:10 PDT 2008

On Apr 21, 10:55=A0am, Stuart <Stu...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
> I have SBS2003 & XP SP2 clients. Clients connect to the network quite happ=
ily
> once logged in but will not during start up. This means Clients won't use
> their roaming profiles. They all worked perfectly under WEP and when Open.=

> Any ideas please?

WPA is used for wireless network access to wireless access points /
routers. This does not seem to used for Windows Servers (SBS2003)
servers. You will need to check the wireless WPA set ups and you
might have to conside WPA entreprise configuration WPA Radius
settings. This might "sync-up" the wireless network with the Windows
Server.

Re: WPA-PSK client slow to connect by Stuart

Stuart
Mon Apr 21 11:26:02 PDT 2008

Thanks for your post. All clients connect to a switch but for some they
connect via a WAP on the switch as well when no cable available. I've updated
a driver on 1 laptop and it worked fine but I did leave the laptop as "ctrl -
delete - enter" status for a few minutes before typing in the password. I'll
keep testing!!

"smlunatick" wrote:

> On Apr 21, 10:55 am, Stuart <Stu...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
> > I have SBS2003 & XP SP2 clients. Clients connect to the network quite happily
> > once logged in but will not during start up. This means Clients won't use
> > their roaming profiles. They all worked perfectly under WEP and when Open.
> > Any ideas please?
>
> WPA is used for wireless network access to wireless access points /
> routers. This does not seem to used for Windows Servers (SBS2003)
> servers. You will need to check the wireless WPA set ups and you
> might have to conside WPA entreprise configuration WPA Radius
> settings. This might "sync-up" the wireless network with the Windows
> Server.
>