I go to a university where there is wifi everywhere. Everyone's computer has the ability to log into campus wifi. When you start your computer you type in your student number, password and log in.
When my diamond finds the wifi signal for my school, I tried to enter my password and student number with the same domain and it says "The server certificate is issued by an unknown authority"
and
"Cannot log on to the wireless network. This network requires a personal certificate to positively identify you."
Anyone know how I can find my certificate on my laptop and transfer it to the phone?
Related
Hi, This is my first posting - please be kind.
After setting up a WPA-PSK authentication on my wireless router, I can’t connect to the Internet with my XDAIIi. I have configured Network Authentication on XDAIIi to match the one on the router and error message I’m getting is:
“Cannot log on to the wireless network. This network requires a personal certificate to positively identify you”. I have checked the SSID and password on both the router and XDAIIi and they match.
How do I enter the a personal certificate to positively identify myself? Any ideas?
PS. My laptop works fine with the same settings.
I have a Qtek 2020i, ROM v.1.11.00 WWE, Radio v.1.03.00. Unlocked from the UK.
I am unable to connect to the internet via wifi. I can connect to my wireless router, decent signal strength, but when I click on Internet Explorer, I get a popup window, telling me "the page you are looking for cannot be found". No matter what I type in the web address line, I get the same message. The little Microsoft flag waves as it searches for the webpage, but will not connect. Everything else with the device works fine.
Any advice will be appreciated.
Thanks, Irwin
I was able resolve the problem...
How ???
Please send me answer !!!
Contribute!
Please post an answer if you manage to solve a problem you asked help for. This might help future users with the same problem.
I think that it's related with ip, dns, wep or wpa setting problem.
In "Network card setting", choose internet connection, then choose "tiacxwln compatible wireless ethernet", use automatic ip if you use DHCP otherwise manually configurate the ip, gateway and dns.
for wep, you can add password without having to activate wlan first, for wap, you have to activate wlan first, then add SSID and password.
gprs !!!
my ppc also has the same problem an i was wondering wat to do in the case i am using gprs connection
I've been struggling with OpenVPN on my Vario III on T-Mobile and hope someone can throw me a bit of a lifeline.
I can connect to my OpenVPN (running on my WRT54GS router) via wifi but the problem is when I try over 3G. Even when I've specified the provider and ticked "exclusive", it manages to connect to my OpenVPN server but I get no further connectivity (to webpages etc).
As said, via wifi this config on my Kaiser works perfectly...
Code:
remote xxxxxx.homeip.net
port 22
dev tap
secret "\\Program files\\OpenVPN\\config\\secret.key"
proto tcp-client
resolv-retry infinite
nobind
comp-lzo
cipher AES-256-CBC
route gateway 192.168.xxx.xxx
redirect-gateway
dhcp-option DNS 192.168.xxx.xxx
but when tried via 3G it seems to have a problem with setting the routing..
Code:
Mon Oct 22 21:58:00 2007 ROUTE: route addition failed using CreateIpForwardEntry: The parameter is incorrect.
Just wondering if there is something either with the T-Mobile network or the Vario III which is specifically stopping me from using OpenVPN
Or are my settings misconfigured?
I've also attached a full copy of the log.
Thanks for any help you can give (Give generously)
CP
Sounds suspiciously like a NAT traversal or proxy issue to me. On the HSDPA network, there's a proxy in the picture. I don't believe that's the case for the Edge network. That could easily be the cause of the problem.
Surely once the connection has been established the NAT issue shouldn't be a problem?
TBH I thought the route addition problem was due to the software being unable to update the local routing table?
NAT traversal issues often manifest themselves as connections that look like they're established, then die immediately. The VPN participants have to know the actual IP addresses of the devices involved, and understand that NAT is happening. Proxies also need to play a role in that process since they're effectively "standing in" for your device. And they may be configured not to permit IPSec traffic at all.
What you've described sounds exactly like NAT traversal issues - the negotiation appears to go just fine, but the actual connection dies on the vine. Since the end points don't have the right data from the negotiation (actual valid addresses to build the tunnel around), the route they try to build is invalid and fails.
In your log, it's impossible to tell since the IP addresses have been all translated to xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx. But I suspect that the ones up until the "TCP connection established with..." message are all displaying valid public IP addresses, and somewhere very shortly after that they start displaying private RFC 1918 addresses.
Proxies + NAT +IPSec = small nightmares. This is one of the reasons SSL VPNs have gained significantly in popularity.
Try Hamachi vpn
https://secure.logmein.com/products/hamachi/vpn.asp
Surur
PerfAlbion said:
In your log, it's impossible to tell since the IP addresses have been all translated to xxx.xxx.xxx.xxx. But I suspect that the ones up until the "TCP connection established with..." message are all displaying valid public IP addresses, and somewhere very shortly after that they start displaying private RFC 1918 addresses.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You have PM
Quick update:
I've just connected my Laptop to the internet via my Kaiser using 3G.
Ran OpenVPN and it connected without a problem.
Technically this would suggest that I should be able to connect with my kaiser but theres either a problem with my config or a bug in the PPC openvpn software :S
I haven't tried on UDP yet which will be my next test....
Any ideas?
Blimey, I didn't know there was a PPC client! I'll try it to see if it works with my setup.
Well I can't even get it to talk to my server so won't be able to help !
Fire up the card in your laptop and take a look at the IP address assigned to your machine. Since it's a different service, they may not be passing you through the proxy that's in place for the Kaiser. If you've received a public address, then you're on a "different network" even though both are 3G services.
PerfAlbion said:
Fire up the card in your laptop and take a look at the IP address assigned to your machine. Since it's a different service, they may not be passing you through the proxy that's in place for the Kaiser. If you've received a public address, then you're on a "different network" even though both are 3G services.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
?? When you connect a laptop via BT to the kaiser, (using internet sharing) it creates a NAT which the traffic is passed over through the 3G service. Essentially using the same service..
Unless you mean the "service" between the windows software & the PPC/WM software is different?
Plus how'd you mean fire up the card in my laptop?
Cheers for your help on this btw.
I'm assuming that the Laptop data service and the PDA data service are treated differently within the AT&T network. While the PDA passes through a proxy, I suspect the laptop does not.
When I say "fire up the laptop card," I mean establish a connection and look at your IP address (ipconfig from a command prompt will show it). It may be a different IP address range than the PDA receives (which you could see using VxIPConfig or VxUtils). Even if it's within the same range, it may be bypassing the proxy.
So while you're using essentially the same technology, I suspect the services are implemented very differently, and that's what we're trying to sort out.
I dont believe it!!!
I downloaded VM Net Brower checked what IP addresses were being assigned and connected successfully! Loaded up www.whatismyip.org and it came up with the proxy of my PC at home.
Unfortunately, my phone was running incredibly slow and thought it best to do a soft reset... afterwards no matter what I do, I can't connect. I just cant figure out why or replicate what I did
Argh.. this is getting to me now... next on the agenda is to try changing the port number from 22 to 8080 or 80 and see what happens.
Well, I recently decided to register my phone for use on my universities network. However, in order to access the network, I am forced to login to a page that uses SSL encryption. When I try to access the page, the browser returns an error telling me it was unable to obtain a secure connection and it refuses to load the page.
I did some Googling and it seems that the Android platform currently denies a connection if it finds *anything* wrong with the SSL certificate. Anyone know a way around this?
I have tried many times to connect to the internet through a WiFi connection. The phone finds WiFi connections OK but when I click on Internet Explorer, the phone tries to connect via GPRS.
I have tried reading the other threads and reading through 'how to connect' on the phone but have not found a solution.
I have had my XDA2i for many years and just changed the digitiser pad and LCD. I've never connected to a WiFi network, despite many tries.
Initial questions:
What IP address has it given you... is it 192.... or 169.... ?
And what is the IP address of your router?
When I select 'Wireless LAN Manager' it displays
Status: Connected to network
SSID: O2wireless**** Tx Rate:Auto
Mode: Infrastructure Channel: 1
BSSID: **-**-**-**-**-**
MAC: **-**-**-**-**-**
IP: 169.254.***.***. Renew IP
Signal quality = 80% Good
I don't know what any of these numbers mean. I have left out some info, as I don't know what is private. Is the IP address mine or the network I'm trying to connect to?
I don't have a wireless network. I just want to connect to hot spots when I'm out, like my friends do.
justmegt said:
When I select 'Wireless LAN Manager' it displays
Status: Connected to network
SSID: O2wireless**** Tx Rate:Auto
Mode: Infrastructure Channel: 1
BSSID: **-**-**-**-**-**
MAC: **-**-**-**-**-**
IP: 169.254.***.***. Renew IP
Signal quality = 80% Good
I don't know what any of these numbers mean. I have left out some info, as I don't know what is private. Is the IP address mine or the network I'm trying to connect to?
I don't have a wireless network. I just want to connect to hot spots when I'm out, like my friends do.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
The IP address of 169.... means that the Router you are connected to isn't giving out dynamic addresses (DHCP)... Dynamic means that you are given your IP address by the router.
You couldd eclare a Static IP address, but for using hotspots you need to use Dynamic.
Where are you testing this?
If it's a friend's router, get them to check that DHCP is enabled and that its giving out addresses (could test with a wireless laptop).
The info I posted is a router I am picking up near my house.
When I'm out, we often go to a Hotel which has free wireless networking. My friend picks it up on her Blackberry with no problems. I can pick it up up but Internet Explorer always tries to connect using GPRS. I'm supposed to be the computer geek, so it's very embarrassing.
Well if you're only getting a 169... IP address then you're not going to get anywhere...
When you turn on wifi it should first of all start 'Scanning Network', then you get the SSID, etc and then get (say) a 192.... address. If you don;t get the 192 address then for some reason you're not picking up a dynamic ip address...