Samsung SLM3320NDXAA Manual De Usuario

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Wireless network setup
159
2.  Using a Network-Connected Machine
Items to prepare
Network-connected computer
Software CD that was provided with your machine
A machine installed with a wireless network interface
USB cable
Creating the ad hoc network in Mac
1
Check whether the USB cable is connected to the machine.
Turn on your computer and the wireless network machine.
Insert the supplied software CD into your CD-ROM drive.
Double -click the CD-ROM icon that appears on your Mac desktop.
Double-click the MAC_Installer folder > Installer OS X icon. 
Click Continue.
Read the license agreement and click Continue.
Click Agree to agree to the license agreement.
When the message that warns that all applications will close on your 
computer appears, click Continue.
10 
Click Wireless Network Setting button on the User Options Pane
11 
After searching the wireless networks, a list of wireless networks your 
machine has searched appears. Click Advanced Setting.
 
Enter the wireless Network Name: Enter the SSID name (SSID is case-
sensitive).
Operation Mode: Select ad hoc.
Channel: Select the channel (Auto Setting or 2412 MHz to 2467 MHz).
Authentication: Select an authentication type.
Open System: Authentication is not used, and encryption may or may 
not be used, depending on the need for data security.
Shared Key: Authentication is used. A device that has a proper WEP key 
can access the network.
Encryption: Select the encryption (None, WEP64, WEP128).
Network Password: Enter the encryption network password value.
Confirm Network Password: Confirm the encryption network 
password value.
WEP Key Index: If you are using WEP Encryption, select the appropriate 
WEP Key Index.
The wireless network security window appears when the ad hoc network 
has security setting.
Select Open System or Shared Key for the authentication and click Next.
WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) is a security protocol preventing 
unauthorized access to your wireless network. WEP encrypts the data 
portion of each packet exchanged on a wireless network using a 64-bit 
or 128-bit WEP encryption key.