All connected now. The problem I was having was that there was no
toolbar across the top so I couldn't get to any of the network apps. I
have no idea why, but when I got gOS 3 to install, that took care of
it.

Thanks,

Richard

On Nov 17, 3:57 pm, mahjongg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> to answer your first connection, the network manager can be started by
> clicking on the network Icon (two computers, or "pond circles",
> depending on which gOS version), an IP address will appear, and
> clicking on the IP address launches the network manager.
>
> On 17 nov, 20:55, weboptimist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Never mind. I went back and tried installing gOS 3 and after a couple
> > of tries, it worked. I must be borderline on RAM or something. The
> > laptop is supposed to have 256k, but some might be taken up by
> > proprietary stuff or something. Who knows?
>
> > Richard
>
> > On Nov 17, 9:16 am, weboptimist <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > I couldn't get gOS 3 to install on my Averatec 3150P, so I tracked
> > > down a copy of gOS 2, which installed with no problem. gOS wouldn't
> > > recognize the built in wireless card, so I tried several PC cards I
> > > had on hand an an old Linksys 801.11b card lit up and there appears to
> > > be a connection.
>
> > > Problem is, I can't figure out where to set up the wireless
> > > configuration. Where do I plug in the SSID and passphrase, etc.? I see
> > > nothing in administration or configuration.
>
> > > I'm new to this OS, but it looks ideal for my old laptop.
>
> > > Thanks for any ideas.
>
> > > Richard
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