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Getting my HP Jornada 690 onto the internet was a challenging but fun project. Here are some of the steps I went through to get from a dream of connectivity to 2 adapters and a Windows XP Professional VM, to Wireless Fidelity, and my future vision.
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- The second I got my hands on this little windows beauty, I was excited to get it connected to the world wide web. I initially decided that the best way to go about this was purchasing a PCMCIA wifi card compatible with the device. I settled on what I initially thought was an Lynksys WPC11 ver.3.1, but may or may not have been some sort of clone with an older version of the firmware based on my linux testing.
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- Initially, I tried the wifi module on the linux partition I had created on the Jornada (more on that in a later post) with great success. I was able to get it running and connected to an open wireless network I created with my phone. It was unable to handle the WPA standard, as I had anticipated.
- Unfortunately, I was unable to get the device driver for the WPC11 working in windows, which may have been on me, or may just be further proof that it was not a legitimate device. Take that how you will, I took it rather poorly and bought another wifi card.
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- I was also unable to get this wifi card working, due to what I would later learn was me forgetting to assign a DNS server and some lazy programming on the driver producer's side. They were throwing up a "could not assign address" error for everything.
- After abandoning the project for a few months and coming back to it, I decided to go for the janky approach. Initially I thought about using my Raspberry Pi and a 56K USB fax modem to emulate dialup for the jornada's onboard modem, but I abandoned that idea pretty quickly. I purchased a USB to Serial converter, and tried to install the necessary software to tunnel internet through the fake serial port to the device. Unfortunately, try as I might, I could only get the software to work inside of a VM running Windows XP Pro. I was still elated, however, to finally get my device on the world wide web.
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- The setup had major problems, however. Because of how sync timing operated, I was only able to surf the web for about 5 minutes before resyncing. A few passes through the registry on the device to search for a fix didn't work, consulting the HPC Factor forums got me nowhere, so I decided to take a final stab at wifi.
- I pulled out the newer wifi card again, discovered the DNS error after a few hours of poking around on the device, got an open wifi network started up on my phone again, and finally, my device was on the internet!
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My future plan for wireless internet on the Jornada is standing up a router and starting a WEP hotspot for the little guy, security issues be damned.
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