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| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
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Greetings, I have three Vista machines on my home network (2 Ultimate, 1 Home
Premium - all dual core, not too old). Vista runs great on all three machines except that when I try to copy files over my network, I see that dreaded "Calculating Time Remaining" and nothing happens. Sometimes it may copy one file over but that's it. Then it hangs forever. when I click "Cancel" it still hangs and I end up rebooting. I waiting patiently for SP1, only to find that it made absolutely no difference and did not solve the problem. I have scoured the web for suggestions and done everything from turning off remote compression to disabling UAC yadda yadda yadda. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be most appreciative. Because I waited so patiently for sp1, I'm beyond the free 90 days support from Microsoft ... grrrrrrrr. -- Jim W. Coleman Port Orchard, WA |
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what NICs? what router? do you have the latest firmware for the
router? please provide some details. On Mon, 24 Mar 2008 12:56:01 -0700, Untangledup wrote: Greetings, I have three Vista machines on my home network (2 Ultimate, 1 Home Premium - all dual core, not too old). Vista runs great on all three machines except that when I try to copy files over my network, I see that dreaded "Calculating Time Remaining" and nothing happens. Sometimes it may copy one file over but that's it. Then it hangs forever. when I click "Cancel" it still hangs and I end up rebooting. I waiting patiently for SP1, only to find that it made absolutely no difference and did not solve the problem. I have scoured the web for suggestions and done everything from turning off remote compression to disabling UAC yadda yadda yadda. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be most appreciative. Because I waited so patiently for sp1, I'm beyond the free 90 days support from Microsoft ... grrrrrrrr. -- Barb Bowman MS-MVP http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ |
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A few things:
If you are connecting all machines through a wireless network, your transfer speed will suffer greately if you are using a,b or even g (some N's are half way decent in transfer speed). Use a wire if possible (CAT5) Use a good router or switch. if you are using a router, make sure you have the latest firmware for the router. If you are using a switch.. try to get a gigabit switch (with corresponding gigabit ethernet cards for all PC's connecting) that should give you higher speeds. Defrag your hard drive.. it is amazing how much more throughput you get when your drives don't have to seek the information. Make sure you don't have spyware and viruses.. sometimes when a machine is slowed down by the gunk out there in the internet, your transfer speed will suffer. In the bottom right hand corner you also see your network connection. Try right clicking on the network connection and press on "Diagnose and Repair" This should clear out any issues you might have.. If you are using a P2P program like bittorrent.. make sure you restart your router and restart your computers. Bittorrent uses several ports at time to send and receive information. If your machine doesn't have an open port or is handling many torrents, it will slow down (if it even works) your file transfer between computers. If all else fails.. grab a crossover cable (search for the term online if you don't know what this is) and connect one of your computers to another one directly and see how the file transfer fares. Also.. make sure your firewalls are off on all machines.. you don't imagine how much trouble these can make when trying to transfer files. Cheers, Jerry S. "Untangledup" wrote: Greetings, I have three Vista machines on my home network (2 Ultimate, 1 Home Premium - all dual core, not too old). Vista runs great on all three machines except that when I try to copy files over my network, I see that dreaded "Calculating Time Remaining" and nothing happens. Sometimes it may copy one file over but that's it. Then it hangs forever. when I click "Cancel" it still hangs and I end up rebooting. I waiting patiently for SP1, only to find that it made absolutely no difference and did not solve the problem. I have scoured the web for suggestions and done everything from turning off remote compression to disabling UAC yadda yadda yadda. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be most appreciative. Because I waited so patiently for sp1, I'm beyond the free 90 days support from Microsoft ... grrrrrrrr. -- Jim W. Coleman Port Orchard, WA |
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In case you have MS Virtual PC 2007 installed on one of your machines: Try
unistalling it. For me this worked. "Untangledup" wrote in message ... Greetings, I have three Vista machines on my home network (2 Ultimate, 1 Home Premium - all dual core, not too old). Vista runs great on all three machines except that when I try to copy files over my network, I see that dreaded "Calculating Time Remaining" and nothing happens. Sometimes it may copy one file over but that's it. Then it hangs forever. when I click "Cancel" it still hangs and I end up rebooting. I waiting patiently for SP1, only to find that it made absolutely no difference and did not solve the problem. I have scoured the web for suggestions and done everything from turning off remote compression to disabling UAC yadda yadda yadda. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be most appreciative. Because I waited so patiently for sp1, I'm beyond the free 90 days support from Microsoft ... grrrrrrrr. -- Jim W. Coleman Port Orchard, WA |
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Jerry, I turned off the firewall on my desktop (Computer Associates) and got
a 100 fold increase in transfer speeds (from 50KBs to 6 Mbs). I then turned it back on and went to my laptop running a Norton firewall and turned off the Norton firewall and tried to copy my 1 GB test file to the laptop. I got speeds of 50 KBs again. I turned off the CA firewall in addition to the Norton firewall and got my speed back. Conclusion: Norton doesn't slow it down, but the CA software practically stops it, regardless of the direction you are transferring files. By the way, for Jim Coleman, Vista is offering 1 year of free SP1 support. Use it if you need it. -- Lyle Montrose, Colorado "Shedding" wrote: A few things: If you are connecting all machines through a wireless network, your transfer speed will suffer greately if you are using a,b or even g (some N's are half way decent in transfer speed). Use a wire if possible (CAT5) Use a good router or switch. if you are using a router, make sure you have the latest firmware for the router. If you are using a switch.. try to get a gigabit switch (with corresponding gigabit ethernet cards for all PC's connecting) that should give you higher speeds. Defrag your hard drive.. it is amazing how much more throughput you get when your drives don't have to seek the information. Make sure you don't have spyware and viruses.. sometimes when a machine is slowed down by the gunk out there in the internet, your transfer speed will suffer. In the bottom right hand corner you also see your network connection. Try right clicking on the network connection and press on "Diagnose and Repair" This should clear out any issues you might have.. If you are using a P2P program like bittorrent.. make sure you restart your router and restart your computers. Bittorrent uses several ports at time to send and receive information. If your machine doesn't have an open port or is handling many torrents, it will slow down (if it even works) your file transfer between computers. If all else fails.. grab a crossover cable (search for the term online if you don't know what this is) and connect one of your computers to another one directly and see how the file transfer fares. Also.. make sure your firewalls are off on all machines.. you don't imagine how much trouble these can make when trying to transfer files. Cheers, Jerry S. "Untangledup" wrote: Greetings, I have three Vista machines on my home network (2 Ultimate, 1 Home Premium - all dual core, not too old). Vista runs great on all three machines except that when I try to copy files over my network, I see that dreaded "Calculating Time Remaining" and nothing happens. Sometimes it may copy one file over but that's it. Then it hangs forever. when I click "Cancel" it still hangs and I end up rebooting. I waiting patiently for SP1, only to find that it made absolutely no difference and did not solve the problem. I have scoured the web for suggestions and done everything from turning off remote compression to disabling UAC yadda yadda yadda. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be most appreciative. Because I waited so patiently for sp1, I'm beyond the free 90 days support from Microsoft ... grrrrrrrr. -- Jim W. Coleman Port Orchard, WA |
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Glad I could be of some help.
"Montrose Lyle" wrote: Jerry, I turned off the firewall on my desktop (Computer Associates) and got a 100 fold increase in transfer speeds (from 50KBs to 6 Mbs). I then turned it back on and went to my laptop running a Norton firewall and turned off the Norton firewall and tried to copy my 1 GB test file to the laptop. I got speeds of 50 KBs again. I turned off the CA firewall in addition to the Norton firewall and got my speed back. Conclusion: Norton doesn't slow it down, but the CA software practically stops it, regardless of the direction you are transferring files. By the way, for Jim Coleman, Vista is offering 1 year of free SP1 support. Use it if you need it. -- Lyle Montrose, Colorado "Shedding" wrote: A few things: If you are connecting all machines through a wireless network, your transfer speed will suffer greately if you are using a,b or even g (some N's are half way decent in transfer speed). Use a wire if possible (CAT5) Use a good router or switch. if you are using a router, make sure you have the latest firmware for the router. If you are using a switch.. try to get a gigabit switch (with corresponding gigabit ethernet cards for all PC's connecting) that should give you higher speeds. Defrag your hard drive.. it is amazing how much more throughput you get when your drives don't have to seek the information. Make sure you don't have spyware and viruses.. sometimes when a machine is slowed down by the gunk out there in the internet, your transfer speed will suffer. In the bottom right hand corner you also see your network connection. Try right clicking on the network connection and press on "Diagnose and Repair" This should clear out any issues you might have.. If you are using a P2P program like bittorrent.. make sure you restart your router and restart your computers. Bittorrent uses several ports at time to send and receive information. If your machine doesn't have an open port or is handling many torrents, it will slow down (if it even works) your file transfer between computers. If all else fails.. grab a crossover cable (search for the term online if you don't know what this is) and connect one of your computers to another one directly and see how the file transfer fares. Also.. make sure your firewalls are off on all machines.. you don't imagine how much trouble these can make when trying to transfer files. Cheers, Jerry S. "Untangledup" wrote: Greetings, I have three Vista machines on my home network (2 Ultimate, 1 Home Premium - all dual core, not too old). Vista runs great on all three machines except that when I try to copy files over my network, I see that dreaded "Calculating Time Remaining" and nothing happens. Sometimes it may copy one file over but that's it. Then it hangs forever. when I click "Cancel" it still hangs and I end up rebooting. I waiting patiently for SP1, only to find that it made absolutely no difference and did not solve the problem. I have scoured the web for suggestions and done everything from turning off remote compression to disabling UAC yadda yadda yadda. If anyone has any suggestions, I would be most appreciative. Because I waited so patiently for sp1, I'm beyond the free 90 days support from Microsoft ... grrrrrrrr. -- Jim W. Coleman Port Orchard, WA |
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I have suffered the same problem and tried everything listed on the web with no success. I then discovered that I could fix this problem by changing the connection speed of my network card from fixed 100Mbps full duplex to auto it sill connects at 100Mbps but the network transfer rate has gone from 130KB/s to 8MB/s in short a file that took 20 minutes to transfer now takes 17 seconds. -- awatt32 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ awatt32's Profile: http://forums.techarena.in/members/awatt32.htm View this thread: http://forums.techarena.in/windows-v...ork/938013.htm http://forums.techarena.in |
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Hi
8MB/sec. (B=Byte) is a typical average transfer of 100Mb/sec. (b=bit) Network. http://www.ezlan.net/net_speed.html Jack (MS, MVP-Networking) "awatt32" wrote in message ... I have suffered the same problem and tried everything listed on the web with no success. I then discovered that I could fix this problem by changing the connection speed of my network card from fixed 100Mbps full duplex to auto it sill connects at 100Mbps but the network transfer rate has gone from 130KB/s to 8MB/s in short a file that took 20 minutes to transfer now takes 17 seconds. -- awatt32 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ awatt32's Profile: http://forums.techarena.in/members/awatt32.htm View this thread: http://forums.techarena.in/windows-v...ork/938013.htm http://forums.techarena.in |