Asked By Gregg Hill
27-Aug-08 01:26 AM

Well, it is fixed.
I Googled some more and MANY found references to the Intel 2200BG, XP SP3,
WPA-PSK using TKIP encryption, and using the latest drivers. That is exactly
what I had.
I went there today and tried turning off the power mode on the laptop per
Intel's article, with no change. I then decided to try it without any
security, due to the Google search hits. It was fast and behaving normally.
I re-enabled the Netgear WGR614 v3 router's maximum encryption, which was
WPA-PSK with TKIP, even with the latest firmware, and tested again. Slow as
cold molasses!
It would again ping by IP or FQDN, but took REALLY LONG to connect to any
site in a browser. One Google search suggested older drivers, so I loaded
some old 2004 drivers. Presto! Normal fast web browsing...for about ten
minutes, then it BSOD'd on me! Several times.
At this point, I asked the client (a home user) to go buy another router
while I removed the old drivers causing the BSOD. Those old drivers only had
a max of WPA-PSK with TKIP, anyway. I recommended a Linksys WRT54G and he
came back with a Linksys WRT160N router. I set it up with WPA2-PSK and AES,
then removed the old drivers on the laptop and reinstalled the latest
drivers-only package (which did not work well before on the Netgear router)
and it works great. There is definitely a problem with the combination of
the Intel 2200BG with XP SP3 and WPA-PSK using TKIP encryption and using the
latest drivers.
Gregg Hill