Connect the cable from the switch of the main router into the switch of the access point, not the wan port. Give the access point an address that's 1 higher than the main router. If the main router is 192.168.1.1 then make the access point 192.168.1.2.
Ethernet: Cable unplugged Hi, I changed the connection from router (Fritzbox 7590) to iMac (late 2013) from WiFi to Ethernet. Under system preferences -> Network appears "cable unplugged" only. No this: I put the ethernet cable into a switch (Netgear GS105) and connect the switch to the iMac ethernet port, then I get a fine 1 Gbit ethernet connection.
Connect to your ASUS router using an Ethernet cable. If you don't have a network cable around, connect to the Wi-Fi emitted by your ASUS router. If you don't know the network name and details, on the router's back or bottom, look for a sticker that shares the default Wi-Fi network name (the technical term is SSID), as seen in the picture
This can be caused by a bad WiFi chip, software issues or a setting issue. In most cases (especially with modern AC/AX routers) it's a network security configuration issue - a lot of modern routers bias towards WPA3 over WPA2 so this stuff will continue to happen -- the wireless hardware Sony used doesn't see WPA3.
The ethernet port light on my router flickers accordingly, I factory reset my modem and router both, power cycled the xbox. Cat6, but the Xbox Series X's connection wildly swings between slow (around 9kb/s, you read that right) to the machine not recognizing that a cable's connected at all to then 500mbps for a second or two before losing
Connect the Lightning to USB-3 adapter to your iPad. If your iPad uses a USB-C connector, plug the USB-C to USB adapter into the device. Plug the USB adapter into the USB to Ethernet adapter and then connect the latter to the network using an Ethernet cable. Open Settings and look for Ethernet to confirm that you're connected.
SZ37BP.
router not recognizing ethernet cable