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| Version | User | Scope of changes |
|---|---|---|
| Aug 16 2007, 3:44 PM EDT | Bryan101 | 42 words added |
| Jul 25 2007, 1:26 AM EDT | wakka092 | 9 words added, 6 words deleted |
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Key: Additions Deletions
Go to www.xbox360live.wetpaint.com if you want to win a free Gold membership for live some will have to pay! 20 Will win for free so you may win easy.But one promlem you will have to do thing that no one will do!
I was at Walmart and saw the Linksys Wireless-G Game Adapter. It was only $25, much cheaper than the $100 Xbox 360 branded wifi adapter. The box said it was compatible with PS2, Gamecube, and original Xbox. I bought it anyway because it was cheap. Like the Xbox branded adapter, you need an existing wireless network. Out of the box, it is the size of three CD cases with a pencil-long antenna. The case is matte black with green indicator lights, which would go great with a Elite console. Setup was easy. I plugged it into my computer's Ethernet port and to power to configure it via the setup CD included with the adapter. You set the wireless network's SSID, WEP/WPA keys, and can select either Automatic IP addressing (DHCP) or manual. I selected using the default IP address as recommended. The settings were applied, unhooked the Ethernet cable and AC power cords. The adapter has an Ethernet out cable which hooks into the 360's Ethernet port. Setup went surprisingly smooth, and in the network testing it recognized it as a wireless bridge. You can still select wireless networks on the console. Overall, if you can still find it, this is a great deal.
I was at Walmart and saw the Linksys Wireless-G Game Adapter. It was only $25, much cheaper than the $100 Xbox 360 branded wifi adapter. The box said it was compatible with PS2, Gamecube, and original Xbox. I bought it anyway because it was cheap. Like the Xbox branded adapter, you need an existing wireless network. Out of the box, it is the size of three CD cases with a pencil-long antenna. The case is matte black with green indicator lights, which would go great with a Elite console. Setup was easy. I plugged it into my computer's Ethernet port and to power to configure it via the setup CD included with the adapter. You set the wireless network's SSID, WEP/WPA keys, and can select either Automatic IP addressing (DHCP) or manual. I selected using the default IP address as recommended. The settings were applied, unhooked the Ethernet cable and AC power cords. The adapter has an Ethernet out cable which hooks into the 360's Ethernet port. Setup went surprisingly smooth, and in the network testing it recognized it as a wireless bridge. You can still select wireless networks on the console. Overall, if you can still find it, this is a great deal.

