A decade ago, census demographers estimated that the nation’s population, which topped 300 million in 2006, would not surpass 400 million until sometime after midcentury. Now, they are projecting that the population will top 400 million in 2039 and reach 439 million in 2050.
So-called minorities, the Census Bureau projects, will constitute a majority of the nation’s children under 18 by 2023 and of working-age Americans by 2039.
For the first time, both the number and the proportion of non-Hispanic whites, who now account for 66 percent of the population, will decline, starting around 2030. By 2050, their share will dip to 46 percent.
So I set up the router, try using both WEP and WPA passwords, then go to completely without security, and still it connects to the internet but my browser says it can't connect. What the fucking hell?
So I set up the router, try using both WEP and WPA passwords, then go to completely without security, and still it connects to the internet but my browser says it can't connect. What the fucking hell?
Quid, who is your ISP? Do you know what a MAC address is?
So I set up the router, try using both WEP and WPA passwords, then go to completely without security, and still it connects to the internet but my browser says it can't connect. What the fucking hell?
Quid, who is your ISP? Do you know what a MAC address is?
Comcast. MAC address is the IP on the bottom of the router right?
Edit: Not an IP. Just a bunch of numbers/letters. But yes.
So I set up the router, try using both WEP and WPA passwords, then go to completely without security, and still it connects to the internet but my browser says it can't connect. What the fucking hell?
Quid, who is your ISP? Do you know what a MAC address is?
Comcast. MAC address is the IP on the bottom of the router right?
Edit: Not an IP. Just a bunch of numbers/letters. But yes.
Correct. Now, the following applies to Comcast a few years back. I'm sure it still rings true.
All network devices have a MAC address -- your computer, rad's computer, your router etc. Some ISPs (Comcast included) will take the first X number of MAC addresses it sees and only let those MAC addresses connect. What may have happened is you ran against this limitation. There are two ways to solve it. The first is calling Comcast and asking they clear the recorded MAC addresses. The second (much easier, IMHO) is to clone a known-to-be-working MAC address and give it to your router. I seem to remember you saying your laptop worked. What are you running, WinXP?
Posts
Barf on Gim
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The name of the game seems to be outbreed whitey.
Prize: you get to puke on Gim again!
does this mean that I, as a white male, will get to use affirmative action when that day comes?
Switch to cock pushups instead?
I don't get it,
But i didn`t mention bras.
That's what DUE's bra says.
Edit: Curses.
Quid, who is your ISP? Do you know what a MAC address is?
Edit: Not an IP. Just a bunch of numbers/letters. But yes.
Correct. Now, the following applies to Comcast a few years back. I'm sure it still rings true.
All network devices have a MAC address -- your computer, rad's computer, your router etc. Some ISPs (Comcast included) will take the first X number of MAC addresses it sees and only let those MAC addresses connect. What may have happened is you ran against this limitation. There are two ways to solve it. The first is calling Comcast and asking they clear the recorded MAC addresses. The second (much easier, IMHO) is to clone a known-to-be-working MAC address and give it to your router. I seem to remember you saying your laptop worked. What are you running, WinXP?