OPPO Digital A103 Wireless Adapter User Manual

OPPO Digital, Inc. Wireless Adapter

User Manual

    A103 Wireless Adapter Rev: 2.0.0 1910020432
 I FCC STATEMENT  This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference  will  not  occur  in  a  particular  installation.  If  this  equipment  does  cause  harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:   Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna.   Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver.   Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected.     Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/ TV technician for help. This device complies with part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: 1)  This device may not cause harmful interference. 2)  This device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. Any changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user’s authority to operate the equipment. Note: The manufacturer is not responsible for any radio or tv interference caused by unauthorized modifications to this equipment. Such modifications could void the user’s authority to operate the equipment. FCC RF Radiation Exposure Statement This  equipment  complies  with  FCC  radiation  exposure  limits  set  forth  for  an  uncontrolled environment. End users must follow the specific operating instructions for satisfying RF exposure compliance. This transmitter must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna  or  transmitter.  This  equipment  has  been  SAR-evaluated  for  use  in  hand.  SAR measurements are based on 5mm spacing from the body and that compliance is achieved at that distance.
 II CE Mark Warning  This is a class B product. In a domestic environment, this product may cause radio interference, in which case the user may be required to take adequate measures.  National restrictions This device is intended for home and office use in all EU countries (and other countries following the EU directive 1999/5/EC) without any limitation except for the countries mentioned below: Country Restriction Reason/remark Bulgaria  General authorization required for outdoor use and public service France Outdoor  use  limited  to  10 mW  e.i.r.p.  within  the  band 2454-2483.5 MHz Military  Radiolocation  use.  Refarming  of  the  2.4  GHz band has been ongoing in recent years to allow current relaxed regulation. Full implementation planned 2012 Italy  If used outside of own premises, general authorization is required Luxembourg None General authorization required  for  network and service supply(not for spectrum) Norway Implemented This subsection does not apply for the geographical area within a radius of 20 km from the centre of Ny-Ålesund Russian Federation  Only for indoor applications Note: Please don’t use the product outdoors in France.
 III  Industry Canada Statement Complies with the Canadian ICES-003 Class B specifications. Cet appareil numérique de la classe B est conforme à la norme NMB-003 du Canada.   This  device  complies  with  RSS  210  of  Industry  Canada.  This  Class  B  device  meets  all  the requirements of the Canadian interference-causing equipment regulations. Cet  appareil  numérique  de  la  Classe  B  respecte  toutes  les  exigences  du  Règlement  sur  le matériel brouilleur du Canada.
  CONTENTS  Package Contents .................................................................................................... 1 Chapter 1 Introduction .......................................................................................... 2 1.1 Product Overview ............................................................................................ 2 1.2 Main Features .................................................................................................. 2 1.3 LED Status ...................................................................................................... 2 Chapter 2 Installation Guide ................................................................................. 3 2.1 Hardware Installation ....................................................................................... 3 2.2 Software Installation ........................................................................................ 3 2.2.1 Overview ........................................................................................................ 3 2.2.2 Installation Guide ............................................................................................ 3 2.3 Uninstall Software ............................................................................................ 8 2.3.1 Uninstall the utility software from your PC ....................................................... 8 2.3.2 Uninstall the driver software from your PC....................................................... 8 Chapter 3 Configuration ........................................................................................ 9 3.1 Configuration of Utility ...................................................................................... 9 3.1.1 Site Survey ................................................................................................... 10 3.1.2 Profile ........................................................................................................... 10 3.1.3 Link Information ............................................................................................ 22 3.1.4 Advanced ..................................................................................................... 24 3.1.5 About ............................................................................................................ 25 3.1.6 An example for application ............................................................................ 25 3.2 Configure with Windows XP Wireless Zero Configuration .............................. 26 Chapter 4 AP Mode .............................................................................................. 28 4.1 Config AP ...................................................................................................... 28 4.2 Advanced ...................................................................................................... 30 4.3 Access Control List ........................................................................................ 30 4.4 Associate List ................................................................................................ 32 4.5 About ............................................................................................................. 33 Chapter 5 Example for Application .................................................................... 34 5.1 Configuration of PSP XLink Online game ...................................................... 34 Appendix A: Glossary ......................................................................................... 38 Appendix B: Specifications ................................................................................ 40
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 1 - Package Contents The following items should be found in your package:   One A103 Wireless Adapter   One USB extension cable   Quick Installation Guide   One Resource CD for A103 Wireless Adapter, including:  Drivers and Utility  User Guide  Other Helpful Information  Note:   Make sure that the package contains the above items. If any of the listed items are damaged or missing, please contact with your distributor.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 2 - Chapter 1  Introduction 1.1  Product Overview Thank you for choosing the A103 Wireless Adapter. The adapter is designed to provide a  high-speed and unrivaled wireless performance for your computer. With a faster wireless connection, you can get a better Internet experience, such as downloading, gaming, video streaming and so on. The  A103  Wireless  Adapter  complies  with  IEEE  802.11n,  IEEE  802.11g  and  IEEE  802.11b standards. It can perfectly interoperate with all the 802.11n/g/b devices. The A103’s auto-sensing capability allows high packet transfer rate of up to 150Mbps for maximum throughput.   Additionally, the  A103 adapter has good capability on anti-jamming and supports WEP, TKIP, AES,WPA  and  WPA2  encryption  to  prevent  outside  intrusion  and  protect  your  personal information from being exposed. The adapter is easy to install and manage. The A103 supports WPS function, which can help you create  a  wireless  connection  immediately.  Quick  Setup  Wizard  is  supported  and  detailed instructions are provided step by step in this user guide.   Featuring high performance transmission rates, simple installation and adaptability, as well as strong  security,  the  A103  Wireless  Adapter  is  the  perfect  solution  for  small  office  and  home needs. 1.2  Main Features   IEEE 802.11n, IEEE 802.11g, IEEE 802.11b standards   Supports USB 2.0 standard   Supports WPA data security, IEEE 802.1x authentication, TKIP/AES encryption, 64/128-bit WEP encryption   Supports wireless LAN data transfer rate of up to 150Mbps   Supports Ad-Hoc and Infrastructure modes   Supports roaming between access points when configured in Infrastructure mode   Eases configuration and provides monitoring information   Supports Windows XP/ Vista/ 7 1.3  LED Status The LED on the top of this card indicates Link/Act status. It blinks when sending and receiving data.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 3 - Chapter 2  Installation Guide 2.1  Hardware Installation 1.  Connect one end of the USB cable to the Adapter. 2.  Connect the other end of the USB cable to the USB port on your computer. The Adapter gets its power from the host and there is no external power supply. The LED should light up when the Adapter is plugged in and the PC is on.  Note:   The Adapter can also be plugged into the USB port on your computer directly. 2.2  Software Installation   2.2.1 Overview The Adapter’s Setup Wizard will guide you through the installation of the Utility and drivers. Before you install the software, please connect the USB adapter with your computer by USB cable. After that, you will be prompted “Found New Hardware Wizard”, click the Cancel button, and run the Setup Wizard program on the CD-ROM.  Note: The Setup steps for Windows XP/ Vista/ 7 are very similar, so the following installation guide takes Windows XP for example. 2.2.2 Installation Guide 1. Insert the Resource CD into your CD-ROM drive, then go to My Computer to double-click CD-ROM A103, and you will see the screen as Figure 2-1. Double-click Setup.exe to start the installation.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 4 -  Figure 2-1 Start the Installation 2.  You’ll see the screen as below. You can choose which to be installed and click Next.  Figure 2-2 Setup Type 3.  In the following screen, select the configuration tool and click Next.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 5 -  Figure 2-3 Setup Type 1)  If  you  want  to  install  the  RL52  Wireless  N  Client  Utility,  please  select  the  Wireless Configuration Tool. 2)  If you only want to use the Microsoft Zero Configuration Tool to configure the wireless connection, please select Microsoft Zero Configuration Tool.   4.  Choose the destination location and click Next.  Figure 2-4 Choose Destination Location
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 6 - 5.  You will see the next screen as below. Click Install to continue.  Figure 2-5 Ready to Install the Program 6.  The following screen for installing will appear.  Figure 2-6 Setup Status  Note:   While files are copying, a warning box about Windows Logo testing (shown in Figure 2-7) may pop  up, please click  Continue Anyway to  continue the  installation for  our  drivers have been tested thoroughly and are able to work with the operating system.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 7 -  Figure 2-7 Windows XP Warning Box 7.  After the files have been successfully copied, the screen in Figure 2-8 will appear. Click the Finish button to finish the installation and reboot the system.  Figure 2-8 InstallShield Wizard Complete After installing the driver successfully, you should see an icon    or    in your system tray.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 8 - 2.3  Uninstall Software 2.3.1 Uninstall the utility software from your PC   1.  On the Windows taskbar, click the Start button, point to All programsWireless, and then click Uninstal-RL52 Wireless N Client Utility. 2.  Follow the Install Shield Wizard to uninstall the utility software from your PC. 2.3.2 Uninstall the driver software from your PC 1.  On the Windows taskbar, click the Start button, and then click Control Panel. 2.  Click the System icon, click on the Hardware tab in the System window. 3.  Click on the Device Manager button, double-click Network adapters, and then right-click Wireless N Client Adapter.  Figure 2-9 Device Manager 4.  Click Uninstall shown in above Figure 2-9, the system will uninstall the driver software of the adapter from your PC.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 9 - Chapter 3  Configuration 3.1  Configuration of Utility A103 Wireless Adapter can be configured by its utility for Windows XP/ Vista/ 7. This section will take  the  configuration  in  Windows  XP  for  example  and  guide  you  to  configure  your  wireless adapter for wireless connectivity with trustable data security encryption features. The configuration steps in Windows XP/ Vista/ 7 are similar. For the configurations in Windows Vista/ 7, please refer to the instructions in Windows XP. After the Adapter's driver and utility have been installed, the adapter’s tray icon,   or  , will appear in your system tray. It means the utility is running on your system. If the utility does not run, you can run the utility by clicking: Start> All programs> Wireless> RL52 Wireless N Client Utility. If the icon still does not appear, the driver or utility may be installed incorrectly or the adapter is unplugged, please try again.   Icon  means the connection has been established.   Icon  means there is no connection.   Right-click the    icon and choose Launch Config Utility, the configuration screen of the utility will appear as shown in the figure below.    Figure 3-1 Configuration Screen The utility provides complete and easy manage tools to:  Display current status information  Edit and add configured profiles  Display current diagnostics information  Note:   If your OS is Windows XP, you can use Windows XP to configure the wireless network settings. (To use  this  function, you must upgrade the OS  with  sp2).  Just right-click the icon    at  the bottom of the screen, and click Use Zero Configuration as Configuration utility to switch the utility.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 10 - 3.1.1 Site Survey Click the Site Survey icon    on the screen of the Utility and the Site Survey screen with many available wireless network choices will appear. The AP list will be updated every two seconds. The AP list includes most used fields, such as SSID, network type, channel used, wireless mode, security status and the signal percentage. The dialog box is shown in Figure 3-2.  Figure 3-2 Site Survey   (Rescan): Click the Rescan icon to refresh the list at any time.   (Add to Profile): Choose an SSID and click the Add to Profile icon to add the network to the profile.     (Connect): Choose an SSID and click the Connect icon to connect to an available network without adding it to the profile. 3.1.2  Profile Click the icon    on the screen of the Utility and the Profile List screen will appear as Figure 3-3.   The Profile List keeps a record of your favorite wireless settings at home, office, and other public hot-spots. You can save multiple profiles, and activate the correct one at your preference. Figure 3-3 shows the basic profile section. The Profile screen provides tools to:  Add a profile    Delete a profile
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 11 -  Edit a profile  Import a profile  Export a profile  Add a WPS profile  Figure 3-3 Profile List   - Click to add a new profile.   - Deletes an existing profile.   - Click to edit an existing profile.   - Imports an existing profile.   - Exports an existing profile.   - Add a WPS profile  Profile Name - Name of profile, preset to PROF* (* indicate 1, 2, 3...).  SSID - The access point or Ad-hoc name.  Authentication - Indicates the authentication mode used.  Encryption - Indicates the encryption type used. 3.1.2.1.  Add a profile 1.  Click the Add icon    on the Profile List screen (Figure 3-3), the Profile configuration screen will appear as shown in Figure 3-4. Enter the Profile Name and choose the SSID from the pull-down list, then click the Next icon    to continue.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 12 -  Figure 3-4 Add a new profile    - Cancel button.    - Back to the previous page.    - Continue to the next page.  Profile Name - Identifies the configuration profile. This name must be unique. Profile names are not case-sensitive.  SSID  -  The  IEEE  802.11  wireless  network  name.  This  field  has  a  maximum  limit  of  32 characters.  Network Type: There are basically two modes of networking:  Infrastructure - All wireless clients will connect to an access point or wireless router.  Ad  Hoc -  Directly  connecting  to  another  computer,  for  peer-to-peer  communication, using wireless network adapters on each computer, such as two or more A103 wireless adapters.  Note: 1)  An  Infrastructure  network  contains  an  Access  Point  or  wireless  router.  All  the  wireless devices or clients will connect to the wireless router or access point. 2) An Ad Hoc network contains only clients, such as laptops with wireless desktop adapters. All the adapters must be in Ad Hoc mode to communicate. 2.  In the following screen, select the corresponding Authentication mode and Encryption type of the profile from the drop-down lists (here takes WPA2-PSK and AES for example), then click the Next icon    to continue.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 13 -  Figure 3-5 Authentication and Encryption  Authentication  -  You  can  choose  the  Authentication  Type  from  the  pull-down  list  with seven options, Open, Shared, WPA, WPA-PSK, WPA2, WPA2-PSK, and 802.1X.  Encryption  -  Displays  which  encryption  type  that  the  adapter  is  using. When  you select Open as Authentication, there are two options: None and WEP. If you select Shared and 802.1X  as  Authentication,  there  is  only  one  option:  WEP.  When  you  select  WPA, WPA-PSK or WPA2-PSK as Authentication, there are two options: TKIP and AES. When you select WPA2 as Authentication, four options are available: TKIP, AES, TKIP(MFP) and AES(MFP). 3.  In  the  screen  that  follows,  enter  the  key  of  the  AP  in  the  empty  field.  Here  takes  Key 1234567890  for  example.  If  the  wireless  network  you  are  trying  to  connect  is security-enabled, you must enter the corresponding key to establish a successful connection. Then click the Next icon    to continue.  Figure 3-6 Enter the Key 4.  The Pre-logon Connect configuration page as shown in Figure 3-7 will then appear. Click the Next icon    to continue.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 14 -  Figure 3-7 Use Pre-logon Connection  Use Pre-logon Connection - Use ID and Password in Profile. 5.  Some advanced settings can be made in Figure 3-8.  Figure 3-8 Profile  Tx Power - Manually force the AP’s transmitting power.  Use RTS Threshold - Here you can specify the RTS (Request to Send) Threshold. If you are not sure, please leave it default here.  Use Fragment Threshold - This value is the maximum size determining whether packets will be  fragmented.  Setting  the  Fragment  Threshold  too  low  may  result  in  poor  network performance because of excessive packages. You are recommended to leave it default if you are not sure about it.   6.  Click the Active icon    in the screen below to connect to the chosen network. When the screen  looks  like  below,  it  shows  that  you  have  successfully  added  a  new  profile  and connected to the wireless network.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 15 -  Figure 3-9 Profile Added Successfully 3.1.2.2.  Delete a profile Highlight the desired profile name on Profile List and click the Delete icon  . The profile will be removed from the list.    Figure 3-10 Delete a Profile 3.1.2.3.  Edit a profile Highlight  the  desired  profile  name  on  Profile  List,  and  click  the  Edit  icon  ,  the  Profile configuration screen will appear as shown in Figure 3-11. You can make some changes of the profile, for instance, you can change the Profile Name to name it like My Network.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 16 -  Figure 3-11 Edit a Profile 3.1.2.4.  Import a profile 1.  From the Profile List screen (shown in Figure 3-3), click the Import icon  . Then the Import Profile screen will appear below. 2.  Browse to the directory where the profile is located. 3.  Highlight the profile name. 4.  Click Open, the imported profile will then appear in the Profile List.  Figure 3-12 Import a Profile 3.1.2.5.  Export a profile 1.  From the Profile List screen (shown in Figure 3-9), highlight the profile to be exported. 2.  Click Export icon  , the Export Profile window will then appear below. 3.  Browse the directory to export the profile to. 4.  Click Save. The profile should then be exported to the specified location.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 17 -  Figure 3-13 Export a Profile 3.1.2.6.  Add a WPS profile Click the Add WPS Profile icon    of the Utility and you can configure the WPS function to join an existing network quickly in the following screen.  Figure 3-14 Profile List If the wireless card supports WPS (Wi-Fi Protected Setup) or QSS (Quick Secure Setup), you can establish  a  wireless  connection  between  wireless  card  and  router  using  either  Push  Button Configuration  (PBC)  method  or  PIN  method.  For  the  configuration  of  WPS,  here  takes  the Wireless Router of our company for example.    Note:   To build a successful connection by WPS, you should also do the corresponding configuration of the Access Point for WPS or QSS function meanwhile.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 18 - I.  PBC Method If your Access Point is equipped with a push-button for Wi-Fi Protected Setup, you can connect the adapter to the Access Point by Push-Button Configuration (PBC) method. Step 1  Press the WPS button on your Access Point device.  Figure 3-15 Press the WPS Button Step 2  Click the Add WPS Profile icon   on the screen as Figure 3-14. Step 3  Select Push-Button Configuration (PBC) on the screen below.  Figure 3-16 Push-Button Configuration Step 4  Click Start PBC.    Figure 3-17 Start PBC
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 19 - Step 5  The Adapter will search for the AP to establish connection automatically.    Figure 3-18 Step 6  Wait a moment until Figure 3-19 appears.  Figure 3-19 II.  PIN Method If  your  Access  Point  supports Wi-Fi  Protected  Setup  and  the  PIN  method,  you  can  add  the adapter to the network by the following two ways: 1)  Enter the PIN into my Access Point Step 1  Click the Add WPS Profile icon   on the screen as Figure 3-14. Step 2  Tick PIN/numeric code and then select the desired SSID from the WPS AP List (take Network for example) on the screen below.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 20 -  Figure 3-20 Step 3  Choose the Config Mode as Enrollee and click the Next icon   on the screen below. Meanwhile, enter the PIN code of the adapter (here takes 51349417 in the screen  for  example)  into  the  configuration  utility  of  the  AP.  For  the  detailed instructions of the AP configuration, please refer to the User Guide of the AP.  Figure 3-21 Enrollee Mode Step 4  Click Start PIN on the following screen.  Figure 3-22 Start PIN Step 5  When Figure 3-19 appears, the configuration is complete.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 21 - 2)  Enter a PIN from my Access Point   Step 1  Click the Add WPS Profile icon   on the screen as Figure 3-14. Step 2  Tick PIN/numeric code and then select the desired SSID from the WPS AP List (take Network for example) on the screen below.    Figure 3-23 Step 3  Choose  the  Config  Mode  as  Registrar  and  enter  the  PIN  of  AP  (here  takes 97056270 for example) into the field beside the Pin Code as Figure 3-24 shows. For the detailed instructions of the AP configuration, please refer to the User Guide of the AP. And then click Next icon   to continue.  Figure 3-24 Registrar Mode Step 4  Click Start PIN on the following screen.  Figure 3-25 Start PIN
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 22 - Step 5  When Figure 3-19 appears, the configuration is complete.  Note: The default PIN code of the AP always can be found in its label or User Guide. 3.1.3  Link Information Click the Link Information icon    of the Utility and you will see the following screen displaying the receiving and transmitting statistical information.   Click the Link Status icon  , you can view the current linking status of the Adapter as shown in the figure below.  Figure 3-26 Link Status The following table describes the items found on the Link Status screen.  Status - Current connection status. If no connection, it will show Disconnected. Otherwise, the SSID and BSSID will show here.  Extra Info - Here displays the link status in use.  Authentication - Shows the authentication mode in use.    Encrtption - The encryption type in use is displayed here.  Network Type - The type of network and the station currently connected are shown here. The options include:   Infrastructure (access point)   Ad Hoc  Central Channel - The channel of the currently connected AP.   Click the Throughput icon  , you can view the Link Quality, Signal Strength and Link Speed to see whether the Adapter is working well.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 23 -  Figure 3-27 Throughput  Link Quality - Displays connection quality based on signal strength and TX/RX packet error rate.  Signal Strength - This shows the strength of the signal.  Link Speed - Shows current transmit rate and receive rate.  Throughput - Displays transmit and receive throughput in unit of Mbps. When clicking the Statistics icon  , you will see the following screens respectively displaying the receiving and transmitting statistical information. Click the Reset Counter icon    to reset all the counters to zero.  Figure 3-28 Transmit Statistics  Transmitted Successfully - Frames successfully sent.  Retransmitted Successfully - Successfully retransmitted frames numbers.  Fail To Receive ACK After All Retries - Frames failed to transmit after hitting retry limit.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 24 -  Figure 3-29 Receive Statistics  Received Successfully - The number of frames successfully received.  Received With CRC Error - The number of frames received with a CRC error.  Dropped Due  To Out-of-Resource  -  The  number of  frames  dropped due to a  resource issue.    Duplicate Frames Received - The number of duplicate frames received. 3.1.4 Advanced Click the Advanced icon   of the Utility and then you can choose the wireless mode on the following screen.  Figure 3-30 Advanced  Wireless  Mode  -  Specifies  2.4  GHz  150  Mbps,  2.4  GHz  54  Mbps  or  2.4  GHz  11  Mbps operation in an access point network. The Wireless adapter must match the wireless mode of
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 25 - the access point with which it associates.  Enable TX Burst - It can translate more data when it is enabled.  Enable TCP Window Size - It can enhance the TCP throughput when it is enabled.  Fast Roaming at - Roaming will disable when Transmit Power is below some dBm if the function is selected.  Apply - Click the Apply button to save the current setting. 3.1.5 About Click the About icon    on the Utility screen and you will see the following screen displaying the wireless card and driver version information.    Figure 3-31 About  Version - The version of the following items.  Utility Date - The creation date of this utility.  Driver Date - The creation date of the wireless network adapter driver.  SDK Date – The creation date of the SDK.  Firmware Version -The version of the adapter firmware.    EEPROM Version - The version of this EEPROM.  MAC Address - The MAC address of the wireless network adapter.  Note:   For more help information, you can go to website of our company.   3.1.6 An example for application Suppose you are using an AP, the SSID is  TEST and it adopts 64-bit encryption with the key 1234567890. To establish a connection with this AP, please follow these steps below: 1.  Launch RL52 Wireless N Client Utility. 2.  Click the Profile icon    of the utility and click the Add icon    on the screen that appears. 3.  The Profile configuration screen will appear, please select SSID TEST from the drop-down
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 26 - list. Enter Test for the Profile Name, and select Infrastructure for the Network Type, then click Next  icon    to  the  next  page.  Select  WPA2-PSK  for  the  Authentication,  AES  for  the Encryption  and  click  Next  icon    to continue.  Enter  1234567890  for  the  Key.  You  can make some advanced settings in the following screens or you are recommended to leave the options default if you are not sure about them.   4.  Highlight the profile named Test on the profile list and click  Active icon    on the Profile screen. The utility will establish a connection with this AP by configured profile. 3.2  Configure with Windows XP Wireless Zero Configuration 1.  Right click the icon    on the bottom of the desktop first and you will see Figure 3-32. Click the  Use  Zero  Configuration  as  Configuration  Utility  option  to  enable  Wireless  Zero Configuration function.  Figure 3-32 Use Zero Configuration as Configuration utility 2.  After  that,  double  click  the  icon  ,  and  the  following  Figure  3-33  will  appear  with  some available wireless network choices. You can highlight a network and then click  Connect to add to a network.  Figure 3-33 Choose a Wireless Network  Note:   If you have not installed SP2 for Windows XP, the screen above will not be available. 3.  Enter the key and click Connect to continue.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 27 -  Figure 3-34 Enter Network Key 4.  If the connection is finished, you will see the screen as Figure 3-35 shows.  Figure 3-35 Connected
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 28 - Chapter 4  AP Mode Right click the icon    to switch to AP Mode. In this mode you can use the A103 as a soft AP.  Figure 4-1  Note:   At this time, if your PC has Installed other network card (wireless or wired), you will be prompted “ICS Select WAN Adapter” to select one of them to be “WAN”. With this function A103 can serve as wireless router based on the selected card connecting to the Internet, which will make the APs of the LAN share the Internet.  Figure 4-2 The configuration utility screen will then appear as  shown in the figure below.  By clicking  the corresponding icon, you can configure the AP, make some advanced settings and view the AP’s status.  The  tools  section  shown  in  the  following  figure  respectively  stands  for  Config  AP , Advanced  , Access Control List  , Associate List   and About    from the left to the right .  Figure 4-3 4.1  Config AP Click the Config AP icon   to load the following screen and set the AP as you need.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 29 - Step 1.  Click  Config  AP  icon  ,  the  following  screen  will  pop  up.  Click  Next  icon    to continue.  Figure 4-4 Config AP  SSID - Enter the SSID of your soft AP, for example, you can name it My Network instead of the default name SoftAP-58. Step 2.  Here you can select country region and set the AP’s channel.  Figure 4-5  Channel - Select the channel from the drop-down list. This field determines which operating frequency will be used. Step 3.  The AP’s authentication mode and encryption type can be set in the following figure.    Figure 4-6 Step 4.  Enter  the  Key  in  the  empty  field  to  make  your  AP  security  enabled  (here  takes 1234567890 for example). Only by entering the corresponding key can other computers
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 30 - establish a successful connection with your AP.  Figure 4-7 4.2  Advanced Click  the  Advanced  icon  ,  the  following  screen  will  appear.  Here  you  can  make  some advanced settings and click Apply to make these settings take effect.    Figure 4-8  Beacon Interval(ms)- Enter a value between 20-1000 milliseconds for Beacon Interval here. The beacons are the packets sent by the router to synchronize a wireless network. Beacon Interval value determines the time interval of the beacons. The default value is 100.  TX Power - Manually force the AP’s transmitting power. System default is 100%.  Idle Time - Manually force the Idle Time using a selected value. The default is 300. 4.3  Access Control List Click the Access Control List icon   of the utility and the Access Control List screen will appear as Figure 4-9. In this page, you can enable/disable the AP to connect with the specified Mac address. Click Allow All, and enter the Mac address allowed to connect to your AP in the empty field beside MAC Address, and then click    to add it to the list, shown in Figure 4-10. Highlight an existing Mac address in the list and click    to remove it from the list as shown in Figure 4-11. When clicking  , you will clear all the Mac addresses in the Access Control List as Figure 4-12.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 31 -  Figure 4-9 Access Control Function  Access Policy - This field allows you to start the function or not. System default is disabled.  Disable - Disable the Access Policy feature.  Allow All - Allow all the MAC addresses in the Access List to access the AP.  Reject All - Disable all the MAC addresses in the Access List to access the AP.  Mac Address - Manually force the Mac address using the function.  Apply - Click to make the settings take effect.  Figure 4-10 Add an Mac Address to the List
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 32 -  Figure 4-11 Remove an existing Mac Address from the List  Figure 4-12 Clear All MAC Addresses 4.4  Associate List Figure  4-13  shows  the  link  status  page.  It  displays  detailed  station  information  of  current connection.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 33 -  Figure 4-13 Mac Table Function  MAC Address - The station’s Mac address of the current connection.  AID - Raise value by current connection.  Power Saving Mode - Support Power Saving Mode on the currently connected station.  Status - The link status of the current connection.   4.5  About The About page displays the wireless card and driver version information as  shown in Figure 4-14.  Figure 4-14 About Page
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 34 - Chapter 5  Example for Application 5.1  Configuration of PSP XLink Online game Please ensure the software and hardware environments are well established before configuring. For  hardware,  at  least  a  PC,  a  A103  Wireless  Adapter  and  a  PSP  device  are  needed.  For software, the A103 Adapter driver should be properly installed. Please operate as follows: Step 1.  Connect the website of X-LINK  http://www.teamxlink.co.uk/ to register, and download the latest software of X-LINK Kai. Step 2.  Install the X-LINK Kai software, click Start > All programs > XLink Kai > Configure Kai, then set as Figure 5-1.  Figure 5-1 Step 3.  After completing the settings, please click Start > All programs > XLink Kai > Start Kai to connect to XLink Kai. Step 4.  Open the wireless mode of the PSP device, and then start an internet game.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 35 - Step 5.  Right-click “My Computer” and select Management. In the prompt page, click Device Manager, then right-click “Wireless N Client Adapter “and select Properties. Then set the value of “PSP Xlink Mode” as Enable following the red marked instruction in the figure.  Figure 5-2 Step 6.  Click Start > Control Panel > Network.  Figure 5-3 Step 7.  Right-click  Wireless  Network  Connection  icon ,  and  select  Properties. In  the following prompt page, highlight Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) and click Properties.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 36 -  Figure 5-4 Step 8.  In the prompt page shown below, select Use the Following IP Address, and set the IP and Subnet mask. After completing setting, click OK.  Figure 5-5  Note: Please  set  the  IP  address  in  different  network  segment with  the  other  network  card  to  avoid conflict. Step 9.  Launch  RL52  Wireless  N  Client  Utility,  then  highlight  the  Network  Name  (SSID) beginning with “PSP” in the “Network” page, and click Connect. Step 10. Check whether your PSP device is detected in the Diagnostics mode of Kai as Figure 5-6 shown: Click the icon    first and then click the folder  .
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 37 -  Figure 5-6 Step 11. Click the icon    on the right top corner to enter the Arena Mode, highlight the arena of your wanted game, and then join or start a new game.  Figure 5-7
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 38 - Appendix A:  Glossary 802.11b -  The  802.11b  standard  specifies  a  wireless  networking  at  11  Mbps  using direct-sequence  spread-spectrum  (DSSS)  technology  and  operating  in  the  unlicensed  radio spectrum at 2.4GHz, and WEP encryption for security. 802.11b networks are also referred to as Wi-Fi networks. 802.11g -  Specification  for  wireless  networking  at  54  Mbps  using  direct-sequence spread-spectrum (DSSS) technology, using OFDM modulation and operating in the unlicensed radio spectrum  at  2.4GHz,  and  backward  compatibility  with IEEE 802.11b  devices,  and WEP encryption for security. 802.11n  -  802.11n  builds  upon  previous  802.11  standards  by  adding  MIMO  (multiple-input multiple-output). MIMO uses multiple transmitter  and  HreceiverH antennas  to allow  for  increased data throughput via spatial multiplexing and increased range by exploiting the spatial diversity, perhaps  through  coding  schemes  like  Alamouti  coding.  The  Enhanced  Wireless  Consortium (EWC)HU[3]UH was formed to help accelerate the IEEE 802.11n development process and promote a technology  specification  for  interoperability  of  next-generation  wireless  local  area  networking (WLAN) products. Ad-hoc Network - An ad-hoc network is a group of computers, each with a wireless adapter, connected  as  an  independent 802.11 wireless  LAN. Ad-hoc  wireless  computers operate  on  a peer-to-peer basis, communicating directly with each other without the use of an access point. Ad-hoc mode is also referred to as an Independent Basic Service Set (IBSS) or as peer-to-peer mode, and is useful at a departmental scale or SOHO operation. DSSS (Direct-Sequence Spread Spectrum) - DSSS generates a redundant bit pattern for all data transmitted. This bit pattern is called a chip (or chipping code). Even if one or more bits in the chip are damaged during transmission, statistical techniques embedded in the receiver can recover the original data without the need for retransmission. To an unintended receiver, DSSS appears as low power wideband noise and is rejected (ignored) by most narrowband receivers. However, to an intended receiver (i.e. another wireless LAN endpoint), the DSSS signal is recognized as the only valid signal, and interference is inherently rejected (ignored). FHSS (Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum) - FHSS continuously changes (hops) the carrier frequency of a conventional carrier several times per second according to a pseudo-random set of channels. Because a fixed frequency is not used, and only the transmitter and receiver know the hop patterns, interception of FHSS is extremely difficult. Infrastructure Network - An infrastructure network is a group of computers or other devices, each with a wireless adapter, connected as an 802.11 wireless LAN. In infrastructure mode, the wireless devices communicate with each other and to a wired network by first going through an access point. An infrastructure wireless network connected to a wired network is referred to as a Basic Service Set (BSS).  A set of two or more BSS in a  single network is referred to  as  an Extended Service Set (ESS). Infrastructure mode is useful at a corporation scale, or when it is necessary to connect the wired and wireless networks.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 39 - Spread  Spectrum  -  Spread  Spectrum  technology  is  a  wideband  radio  frequency  technique developed by the military for use in reliable, secure, mission-critical communications systems. It is designed to  trade off bandwidth efficiency for reliability, integrity, and security. In other words, more  bandwidth  is  consumed  than  in  the  case  of  narrowband  transmission,  but  the  trade  off produces a signal that is, in effect, louder and thus easier to detect, provided that the receiver knows the parameters of the spread-spectrum signal being broadcast. If a receiver is not tuned to the right frequency, a spread-spectrum signal looks like background noise. There are two main alternatives,  Direct  Sequence  Spread  Spectrum  (DSSS)  and  Frequency  Hopping  Spread Spectrum (FHSS). SSID  -  A  Service  Set  Identification  is  a  thirty-two  character  (maximum)  alphanumeric  key identifying a wireless local area network. For the wireless devices in a network to communicate with  each  other,  all  devices  must  be  configured  with  the  same  SSID.  This  is  typically  the configuration  parameter  for  a  wireless  PC  card.  It  corresponds  to  the  ESSID  in  the  wireless Access Point and to the wireless network name.   WEP (Wired Equivalent Privacy) - A data privacy mechanism based on a 64-bit or 128-bit shared key algorithm, as described in the IEEE 802.11 standard.   Wi-Fi  -  A  trade  name  for  the  802.11b  wireless  networking  standard,  given  by  the  Wireless Ethernet  Compatibility  Alliance  (WECA,  see  http://www.wi-fi.net),  an  industry  standards  group promoting interoperability among 802.11b devices. WLAN  (Wireless  Local  Area  Network)  -  A  group  of  computers  and  associated  devices communicate with each other wirelessly, which network serving users are limited in a local area. WPA (Wi-Fi Protected Access) - A wireless security protocol use TKIP (Temporal Key Integrity Protocol) encryption, which can be used in conjunction with a RADIUS server.
      A103 Wireless Adapter User Guide  - 40 - Appendix B:  Specifications General Interface USB 2.0 Connector Standards IEEE 802.11n, IEEE 802.11g, IEEE 802.11b Operating System Windows XP/ Vista/ 7 Safety & Emission FCC, CE Frequency 2.412 ~ 2.472 GHz (For CE Area) 2.412 ~ 2.462 GHz (For FCC Area) Sensitivity 130M: -68dBm 54M: -68dBm 11M: -85dBm Spread Spectrum Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum (DSSS) Wireless Radio Data Rate Up to 150Mbps Modulation 11n OFDM, 11g OFDM , 11b CCK/DSSS Media Access Protocol CSMA/CA with ACK Data Security WPA, 64/128 bits WEP, TKIP/AES, IEEE 802.1X authentication  Physical Environmental Working Temperature 0℃~40℃ (32℉~104℉) Storage Temperature -40℃~70℃ (-40℉~158℉) Humidity 10%~90% RH, Non-condensing  * Only 2.412GHz~2.462GHz is allowed to be used in USA, which means only channel 1~11 is available for American users to choose.

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