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Activating Wake On LAN functionality

Activating Wake On LAN functionality

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DeathBeastDB
Senior Member
337
09-23-2019, 09:12 AM
#1
I’m facing issues getting Wake on LAN to activate on my machine. A helpful guide would be greatly appreciated, and I’d welcome any details about components that might assist. My setup includes an ASRock B365 PRO4 motherboard with an Intel Core i5-9400F processor, a Wi-Fi connection via Ethernet, and a Netgear OBI WiFi extender.
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DeathBeastDB
09-23-2019, 09:12 AM #1

I’m facing issues getting Wake on LAN to activate on my machine. A helpful guide would be greatly appreciated, and I’d welcome any details about components that might assist. My setup includes an ASRock B365 PRO4 motherboard with an Intel Core i5-9400F processor, a Wi-Fi connection via Ethernet, and a Netgear OBI WiFi extender.

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CobbleWalker
Member
238
09-23-2019, 06:06 PM
#2
Here are clearer alternatives to your phrase:
The guide you shared explains how to use Wake-on-LAN on an ASRock B450 Pro 4 model, though it may not be identical. The instructions should help you set up the connection properly.
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CobbleWalker
09-23-2019, 06:06 PM #2

Here are clearer alternatives to your phrase:
The guide you shared explains how to use Wake-on-LAN on an ASRock B450 Pro 4 model, though it may not be identical. The instructions should help you set up the connection properly.

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TheBrick20
Junior Member
7
09-24-2019, 11:02 PM
#3
Identifying the problem area: Are you facing difficulties with WOL in Windows, BIOS settings, router static IP configuration, or activating the PC via a magic packet?
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TheBrick20
09-24-2019, 11:02 PM #3

Identifying the problem area: Are you facing difficulties with WOL in Windows, BIOS settings, router static IP configuration, or activating the PC via a magic packet?

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twerped17
Junior Member
17
09-25-2019, 07:09 AM
#4
When turning on the device manager features for magic packets, you don't need to adjust anything on the Ethernet connection itself.
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twerped17
09-25-2019, 07:09 AM #4

When turning on the device manager features for magic packets, you don't need to adjust anything on the Ethernet connection itself.

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domm0nkey
Member
154
09-29-2019, 06:00 AM
#5
Ensure the connection follows your computer’s network interface settings. Based on your description, the device should be powered on and properly set up to communicate via Ethernet or Wi-Fi. The Wi-Fi extender must also be activated for the PC’s network card to function correctly.
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domm0nkey
09-29-2019, 06:00 AM #5

Ensure the connection follows your computer’s network interface settings. Based on your description, the device should be powered on and properly set up to communicate via Ethernet or Wi-Fi. The Wi-Fi extender must also be activated for the PC’s network card to function correctly.

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Tim9810
Member
231
09-29-2019, 09:16 AM
#6
Magic packets are essentially simple, low-level components. Anything that changes the path of network data will likely lose these packets since they can't determine their destination.
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Tim9810
09-29-2019, 09:16 AM #6

Magic packets are essentially simple, low-level components. Anything that changes the path of network data will likely lose these packets since they can't determine their destination.