![]() |
|
Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
Alright. This issue is driving me crazy and I do not know how to fix it.
My Desktop Windows Vista machine will not connect to the network. My router (Apple Airport Extreme) works fine and I can connect with my Macbook (macbook booting Vista) and my other Vista laptop. These connections are wireless. My desktop is wired to the router. My motherboard is an Asus Striker Extreme with two Gigabit ethernet ports. I have one disabled currently. Neither of the ports will connect to the network and they are both giving me the same type of error... making me think that this is software. Also, my PC worked fine the other day and then just began to not connect in the middle of nowhere. Problem: Network adapters are stuck identifying network - local only. I pull Ipconfig and get that their IPv4 is set to 169.254.104.31(Preferred). Subnet mask is 255.255.0.0. I also found that I have three tunnel adapters for some reason. I have tried to create static IPs with both adapters, create my own subnet with both of them, I have tried to renew IP, release IP, delete & reinstall the adapters, reboot the PC many times, take each adapter out of BIOS individually, shut one down and work on them individually, try to have Vista repair the connections to absolutely no avail. I am frustrated and hope that someone out there can help me with this. This must be a software problem considering that the light on back of my motherboard ports are finding the router (one blinking orange and the connect a steady green). Any help will be GREATLY appreciated T |
|
|||
|
I have a similar problem with this motherboard and Vista. Microsoft changed a
Braodcast flag within the TCP stack in Vista and appears that whem the machine starts up it checks the network. If it cannot get a quick reply it disables the tcp stack and you get no network although the router and machine show a hardware connection. Seems that my agged Netgear Router doesn't like this Flag set and often, but no always, replies too late. The solution is in http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928233/en-us although I believe that Microsoft may have changed the key name in SP1 as I used to use the key DhcpConnForceBroadcastFlag but after SP1 I had to follow the KB article. Might be worth a try. "Tom" wrote: Alright. This issue is driving me crazy and I do not know how to fix it. My Desktop Windows Vista machine will not connect to the network. My router (Apple Airport Extreme) works fine and I can connect with my Macbook (macbook booting Vista) and my other Vista laptop. These connections are wireless. My desktop is wired to the router. My motherboard is an Asus Striker Extreme with two Gigabit ethernet ports. I have one disabled currently. Neither of the ports will connect to the network and they are both giving me the same type of error... making me think that this is software. Also, my PC worked fine the other day and then just began to not connect in the middle of nowhere. Problem: Network adapters are stuck identifying network - local only. I pull Ipconfig and get that their IPv4 is set to 169.254.104.31(Preferred). Subnet mask is 255.255.0.0. I also found that I have three tunnel adapters for some reason. I have tried to create static IPs with both adapters, create my own subnet with both of them, I have tried to renew IP, release IP, delete & reinstall the adapters, reboot the PC many times, take each adapter out of BIOS individually, shut one down and work on them individually, try to have Vista repair the connections to absolutely no avail. I am frustrated and hope that someone out there can help me with this. This must be a software problem considering that the light on back of my motherboard ports are finding the router (one blinking orange and the connect a steady green). Any help will be GREATLY appreciated T |
|
|||
|
Attn Striker Extreme owners. Ok I have had the same issue and i have found a
fix but...........you must 1: Use at your own risk 2: follow instructions exactly it looks like this is a bios issue guys! the 1503 bios is junk it will work for a while then pow it will not grab an ip address go to http://vip.asus.com/forum/view.aspx?...age=1&count=52 and download bios 1504 from here http://www.keepandshare.com/doc/view.php?id=453538&da=y Save to a usb thumb drive Then boot up your Striker Extreme press the del key go into tools then go to ez flash & find your thumb drive and update to 1504. ********VERY IMPORTANT*********** YOU MUST NOT LOAD YOUR SETTING FROM THE PROFILES IF YOU DO THE BIOS WILL BRICK AND YOULL BE STUCK OPENING YOUR CASE AND MOVING THE BIOS RESET JUMPER AND PRESSING RESET CMOS. I dont know why this is but i had to reset my bios 3 time b 4 i figured that out. write down all of your setting by hand. once you do all of this restart and if you have a raid setup change the settings in bios again to reflect raid and boot again (for those of you who have neverf done this before (flash bios) follow instructions very carfuly good luck And happy networking! "Tom" wrote: Alright. This issue is driving me crazy and I do not know how to fix it. My Desktop Windows Vista machine will not connect to the network. My router (Apple Airport Extreme) works fine and I can connect with my Macbook (macbook booting Vista) and my other Vista laptop. These connections are wireless. My desktop is wired to the router. My motherboard is an Asus Striker Extreme with two Gigabit ethernet ports. I have one disabled currently. Neither of the ports will connect to the network and they are both giving me the same type of error... making me think that this is software. Also, my PC worked fine the other day and then just began to not connect in the middle of nowhere. Problem: Network adapters are stuck identifying network - local only. I pull Ipconfig and get that their IPv4 is set to 169.254.104.31(Preferred). Subnet mask is 255.255.0.0. I also found that I have three tunnel adapters for some reason. I have tried to create static IPs with both adapters, create my own subnet with both of them, I have tried to renew IP, release IP, delete & reinstall the adapters, reboot the PC many times, take each adapter out of BIOS individually, shut one down and work on them individually, try to have Vista repair the connections to absolutely no avail. I am frustrated and hope that someone out there can help me with this. This must be a software problem considering that the light on back of my motherboard ports are finding the router (one blinking orange and the connect a steady green). Any help will be GREATLY appreciated T |
|
|||
|
hello tom, i'm having the same problem, just downloaded 1504 and entered ez
flash, and i clicked enter on 1504.bin but it said 'file size does not match exisitng file size!' what does this mean and how can i make it flash :S? please help thanks, ian "genius156iq" wrote: Attn Striker Extreme owners. Ok I have had the same issue and i have found a fix but...........you must 1: Use at your own risk 2: follow instructions exactly it looks like this is a bios issue guys! the 1503 bios is junk it will work for a while then pow it will not grab an ip address go to http://vip.asus.com/forum/view.aspx?...age=1&count=52 and download bios 1504 from here http://www.keepandshare.com/doc/view.php?id=453538&da=y Save to a usb thumb drive Then boot up your Striker Extreme press the del key go into tools then go to ez flash & find your thumb drive and update to 1504. ********VERY IMPORTANT*********** YOU MUST NOT LOAD YOUR SETTING FROM THE PROFILES IF YOU DO THE BIOS WILL BRICK AND YOULL BE STUCK OPENING YOUR CASE AND MOVING THE BIOS RESET JUMPER AND PRESSING RESET CMOS. I dont know why this is but i had to reset my bios 3 time b 4 i figured that out. write down all of your setting by hand. once you do all of this restart and if you have a raid setup change the settings in bios again to reflect raid and boot again (for those of you who have neverf done this before (flash bios) follow instructions very carfuly good luck And happy networking! "Tom" wrote: Alright. This issue is driving me crazy and I do not know how to fix it. My Desktop Windows Vista machine will not connect to the network. My router (Apple Airport Extreme) works fine and I can connect with my Macbook (macbook booting Vista) and my other Vista laptop. These connections are wireless. My desktop is wired to the router. My motherboard is an Asus Striker Extreme with two Gigabit ethernet ports. I have one disabled currently. Neither of the ports will connect to the network and they are both giving me the same type of error... making me think that this is software. Also, my PC worked fine the other day and then just began to not connect in the middle of nowhere. Problem: Network adapters are stuck identifying network - local only. I pull Ipconfig and get that their IPv4 is set to 169.254.104.31(Preferred). Subnet mask is 255.255.0.0. I also found that I have three tunnel adapters for some reason. I have tried to create static IPs with both adapters, create my own subnet with both of them, I have tried to renew IP, release IP, delete & reinstall the adapters, reboot the PC many times, take each adapter out of BIOS individually, shut one down and work on them individually, try to have Vista repair the connections to absolutely no avail. I am frustrated and hope that someone out there can help me with this. This must be a software problem considering that the light on back of my motherboard ports are finding the router (one blinking orange and the connect a steady green). Any help will be GREATLY appreciated T |
|
|||
|
I was having the same problem on my 'Vista Home' computer, and lucked out with a very simple solution: unplugging and resetting the Linksys router. The other three computers on the network - all Windows XP SP2 - were connecting fine, so I figured there was no problem with my router or Internet. But, once I did it, the problem was gone. I just shut down the Vista computer before resetting the router and booted it up again afterwards. -- FastTracker |