- It's the applications, stupid
- Will a whitelist save personal computing?
- Thousands of Web sites under attack
- To solve the unsolvable problem
- Re-thinking the security of virtual machines
- Security Development Lifecycle trumps code complexity
- Is your Web site FIPS compliant?
- Computer security: Why have least privilege?
- Strategic security: Get a handle on authentication
- Control user installs of software
April 13, 2007 | Comments: (0)
Making Verizon EDVO work with Vista
I've been a big fan of Verizon's EDVO/Broadband service for a year or so now. Plug in a EDVO PC Card into your laptop or mobile device and get pretty kick butt Internet speeds. It's very pricey at $59-$79/mo. plus normal fees and taxes, but it gets great speeds and access.
Since I'm running Windows Vista Enterprise on my work laptop now, I needed a way to get Verizon's software and the EDVO card's drivers working with Vista. As with most wireless phone services and features, the phone companies rarely update the software once released. In my case, the Verizon-provided software called VZAccess didn't like Vista at first.
It's a simple fix two solutions. 1) Just fool VZAccess into thinking it is running in XP, or 2) Don't use VZAccess. Just install the card driver and use Vista's dial-up features. Either option works. Keith Comb's blog has an excellent entry on it.
Keith's blog has both solutions. The 'Running VZAccess in Windows XP compatiblity mode' is near the bottom of the blog entry. And I'll add a few things.
First copy the VZAccess.exe installer file from the CD-ROM's \VZAccess folder to your mobile device. Then right-click the file on the mobile device and click on Properties. Then click on the Compatibility tab. Then click on the Show settings for all users button and put in the admin credentials (if asked). Then enable the Run this program in compability mode for: and select Windows XP (Service Pack 2).
After installing the software and installing the drivers, you should have a VZAccess Manager icon on your desktop. Depending on your setup, you may or may not need to enable compatibility on the normal VZAccess Manager executable.
Posted by Roger Grimes on April 13, 2007 12:07 PM
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