Linksys Wireless-G WRT54G Router Logo

Related Topics:

Posted on Mar 25, 2013

How to log into mybrouter - Linksys Wireless-G WRT54G Router

1 Answer

James Vanover

Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Corporal:

An expert that has over 10 points.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

  • Contributor 18 Answers
  • Posted on Mar 25, 2013
James Vanover
Contributor
Level 1:

An expert who has achieved level 1.

New Friend:

An expert that has 1 follower.

Corporal:

An expert that has over 10 points.

Mayor:

An expert whose answer got voted for 2 times.

Joined: Jul 19, 2012
Answers
18
Questions
1
Helped
11075
Points
38

Linksys WRT54G Wireless-G Broadband Router

  1. Begin setup of your Linksys Wireless Router by first plugging in the power. Give it 10 seconds or so to initialize and then plug an ethernet cable into your wall jack and into the port on the back of the router marked Internet. Next get another ethernet cable and plug one end into your laptop and the other into one of the ports labeled 1-4 on the router. Your computer is now properly connected to the router to begin its setup and configuration.
  2. Next open a web browser window on the connected computer and type http://192.168.1.1 into the address bar and press enter. A window will pop up prompting you for a username and password to access the configuration page for your router. Enter admin for both the username and password.
  3. You should see the Setup page shown below

Add Your Answer

×

Uploading: 0%

my-video-file.mp4

Complete. Click "Add" to insert your video. Add

×

Loading...
Loading...

Related Questions:

tip

The Log function!!

I calculators you can't change or set the base of 'log' is default 10 so you need to know these:

log x (base y) = log x / log y


when log x it's automatic log x (base 10) here some examples:

log 8 (base 2) = log 8 / log 2
log 27 (base 3) = log 27 / log 3


and the base it's default 10 again, and that is how you need to use it in calculators(no bases), and here the explanation to this:

log x (base y) = log x (base 10) / log y (base 10) = (log x / log 10) / (log y / log 10) = (log x / log 10) * (log 10 / log y) = log x / log y


here so other stuff about 'log' :

log (x*y) = log x + log y
log (x/y) = log x - log y


Hope it's helped
0helpful
1answer

2log(base4)x + log(base4)3=log(base4)x-log(base4)2

Hi,
It is easier to use the rules for logarithms to clean this equation before trying to solve it. And the calculator is no help here.
Let me represent the logs as follows log b in base a = log(a,b). The first argument is the base.

2*log(4,x) - log(4,3)= log(4,x)- log(4,2)

Here you have two similar terms 2*log(4,x) on the left and log(4,x) on the right. Gather them both on the same side, say the left. You have

2*log(4,x) -log(4,x) +log(4,3) = log(4,x)-log(4,x) -log(4,2)

which is equivalent to log(4,x) +log(4,3) = -log(4,2)

Gather the constant terms on the right, and use log(a) +log(b)=log(a*b)

log(4,x) = -log(4,2) -log(4,3) = - { log(4,2)+log(4,3)} = -log(4,2*3)

You get log(4,x)= -log(4,6).

Take the constant term to the left, while changing its sign in the process. On the right remains 0, which is also the log of 1 in any base So log(4,x)+log(4,6) =0 =log(4,1)

Use the rule log(a) +log(b) = log(a*b) valid in any base, to obtain
log(4,6x)=log(4,1) which is equivalent to 6x=1. The solution is x=1/6

There are a few other shortcuts to get the solution but I preferred to take a pedestrian, step by step, approach.

Hope it helps.


10helpful
2answers

I need help with a change of base formula problem.

It's simple here some logs:

log x base y = log x / log y
log (x*y) = log x + log y
log (x/y) = log x - log y
you just need to know that the default base of log in calculators is 10, so log x mean
log x base 10 = log x / log 10,
so write log x / log y for log x base y example:
log 8 base 2 = log 8 / log 2 that is how you write it on calculator, hope it was helpful
7helpful
2answers

How do you input a logarithm base into the ti83 plus?

You can't it's default 10 so learn this logs:
log x base y = log x / log y
log (x*y) = log x + log y
log (x/y) = log x - log y
so just divide the logs
hope it helps
4helpful
1answer

How to calculate

It's very simple: the calculators have a default base 10 so that log x it's log x base 10 so here is some logs:
log x base y = log x / log y
log (x*y) = log x + log y
log (x/y) = log x - log y
Hope it's helped
0helpful
1answer

To solve the problem using log

Look the calculators has a default base 10 and you can't change it but you may learn this:
log x base y = log x / log y
log (x*y) = log x + log y
log (x/y) = log x - log y
so instead input log 8 base 2 you need to input log 8 / log 2
your example answer is about 0.919... if i get right what did you write.
Glad to help :)
0helpful
1answer

Find log(1-.2)

I don't get it but here some help with logs:
log x base y = log x / log y (when log x is default base 10 in calculators) and
log (x*y) = log x + log y
log (x/y) = log x - log y
the bases is default 10
hope it's helped
2helpful
1answer

Logarithmic functions

All calculators it's the same:
log x base y = log x / log y
log (x*y) = log x + log y
log (x/y) = log x - log y
the default base in all the calculators is 10 so instead of writing log 4 base 2 you simply need to write log 4 / log 2
Hope you understand :)
1helpful
1answer

Using logs

Here something that would help you:

log x base y = log x / log y
log (x*y) = log x + log y
log (x/y) = log x - log y

so log 24 base 2 it's log 24 / log 2 etc.
and if i get right what you wrote x= 10 ^ ( 3 * (log 5) ) if no inverse it it's easy really Hope it's helped you.
Not finding what you are looking for?

57 views

Ask a Question

Usually answered in minutes!

Top Linksys Computers & Internet Experts

ExpressFiX
ExpressFiX

Level 2 Expert

691 Answers

Brad Brown

Level 3 Expert

19187 Answers

Grand Canyon Tech
Grand Canyon Tech

Level 3 Expert

3867 Answers

Are you a Linksys Computer and Internet Expert? Answer questions, earn points and help others

Answer questions

Manuals & User Guides

Loading...