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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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I have been using wireless network fine until i tried to connect to a public
hotspot and it appears as local only, no internet connection. I tried it with my mobile pc and WindowsXP and it works fine. I have checked this wireless hotspot is 801b which is a legacy, could it be that vista wireless connection software has a problem with legacy hotspots. |
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Akram,
If you change your battery setting to performance, instead of balanced, it may correct that. Some older AP's have issues with the wireless in Vista chk this KB out: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928152 Jeff "Akram" wrote in message ... I have been using wireless network fine until i tried to connect to a public hotspot and it appears as local only, no internet connection. I tried it with my mobile pc and WindowsXP and it works fine. I have checked this wireless hotspot is 801b which is a legacy, could it be that vista wireless connection software has a problem with legacy hotspots. |
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I am also having the same issues on Vista Enterprise. Although I have
succesfully connected to a WEP wireless network with a Dlink DWL 650+ network card in my laptop in the past, when attempting to access a WiFi hotspot with open authentication it fails to get a DHCP address. (169. etc is what i get) This tells me that the card and the drivers work, although there still seems to be a problem with Vista somewhere. I've tried different cards (linksys wireless G), three different types of software (Dlink, AT&T, Linksys) and several other ideas that people were kind enough to suggest. (power management, firewall, event viewer etc). I've tried three ways from sunday to get this machine connected to a hotspot to no avail. It simply should NOT be that difficult with a new OS. Anyone else have any suggestions before i remove another Microsoft Windows Millenium? "Jeff" wrote: Akram, If you change your battery setting to performance, instead of balanced, it may correct that. Some older AP's have issues with the wireless in Vista chk this KB out: http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928152 Jeff "Akram" wrote in message ... I have been using wireless network fine until i tried to connect to a public hotspot and it appears as local only, no internet connection. I tried it with my mobile pc and WindowsXP and it works fine. I have checked this wireless hotspot is 801b which is a legacy, could it be that vista wireless connection software has a problem with legacy hotspots. |
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"Robert" wrote:
I am also having the same issues on Vista Enterprise. Although I have succesfully connected to a WEP wireless network with a Dlink DWL 650+ network card in my laptop in the past, when attempting to access a WiFi hotspot with open authentication it fails to get a DHCP address. (169. etc is what i get) This tells me that the card and the drivers work, although there still seems to be a problem with Vista somewhere. I've tried different cards (linksys wireless G), three different types of software (Dlink, AT&T, Linksys) and several other ideas that people were kind enough to suggest. (power management, firewall, event viewer etc). I've tried three ways from sunday to get this machine connected to a hotspot to no avail. It simply should NOT be that difficult with a new OS. Anyone else have any suggestions before i remove another Microsoft Windows Millenium? You have the latest Wi-Fi card drivers, specially designed for Vista (and not legacy WinXP drivers) - correct? You've used the Vista buil-in diagnostics to troubleshoot the connection issue ( netsh wlan ... ) - correct? --PA |
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Vista drivers are not available - and i doubt that they will be for a legacy
802.11b card, however, the XP drivers worked just fine when i had it connected to a WEP network. (I'm betting it would connect to anything that was encrypted). Not sure what this is all about - It's like it stops you from connecting to an unsecured network or something. Ahh the Vista built in diagnostics - those are about as good as the ones on XP, not very. As far as I'm concerned it's a glorified ipconfig /release and /renew command built into an idiot button. Suffice to say that did not work. I did start working on the netsh wlan, but after no initial success, i gave up quickly. To be honest at this point i was 2 plus hours into attempting to figure out why i couldnt get the latest and greatest from Micorsoft connected to an open network.... Thanks for ideas. Any others? Robert "Pavel A." wrote: "Robert" wrote: I am also having the same issues on Vista Enterprise. Although I have succesfully connected to a WEP wireless network with a Dlink DWL 650+ network card in my laptop in the past, when attempting to access a WiFi hotspot with open authentication it fails to get a DHCP address. (169. etc is what i get) This tells me that the card and the drivers work, although there still seems to be a problem with Vista somewhere. I've tried different cards (linksys wireless G), three different types of software (Dlink, AT&T, Linksys) and several other ideas that people were kind enough to suggest. (power management, firewall, event viewer etc). I've tried three ways from sunday to get this machine connected to a hotspot to no avail. It simply should NOT be that difficult with a new OS. Anyone else have any suggestions before i remove another Microsoft Windows Millenium? You have the latest Wi-Fi card drivers, specially designed for Vista (and not legacy WinXP drivers) - correct? You've used the Vista buil-in diagnostics to troubleshoot the connection issue ( netsh wlan ... ) - correct? --PA |
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I had the same problem, and as an old Networking hack, finally managed to get
it to work. There are incompatabilities with Vista and some of the built-in DHCP servers in routers. As a result, kiss off automatic assignment of network settings for these routers (wireless or otherwise). You will have to MANUALLY set your IP info, just like in the old days. Unfortunately, that also means that you will have to CAN those adapter IP setting when using true DHCP enabled routers that actually work. Here is one solution that may work for SOME routers (but it does NOT work for all of them!) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928233/en-us The reality is that as long as you can connect to the router (i.e. local only connection) then the manual assignment of the IP info should get you there. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Akram" wrote: I have been using wireless network fine until i tried to connect to a public hotspot and it appears as local only, no internet connection. I tried it with my mobile pc and WindowsXP and it works fine. I have checked this wireless hotspot is 801b which is a legacy, could it be that vista wireless connection software has a problem with legacy hotspots. |
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On 22 Feb, 16:58, Bill Wood
wrote: I had the same problem, and as an old Networking hack, finally managed to get it to work. There are incompatabilities with Vista and some of the built-in DHCP servers in routers. As a result, kiss off automatic assignment of network settings for these routers (wireless or otherwise). You will have to MANUALLY set your IP info, just like in the old days. Unfortunately, that also means that you will have to CAN those adapter IP setting when using true DHCP enabled routers that actually work. Here is one solution that may work for SOME routers (but it does NOT work for all of them!) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928233/en-us The reality is that as long as you can connect to the router (i.e. local only connection) then the manual assignment of the IP info should get you there. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Akram" wrote: I have been using wireless network fine until i tried to connect to a public hotspot and it appears as local only, no internet connection. I tried it with my mobile pc and WindowsXP and it works fine. I have checked this wireless hotspot is 801b which is a legacy, could it be that vista wireless connection software has a problem with legacy hotspots. http://groups.google.co.uk/group/mic...03f284489f27c2 |
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We've tested quite a number of IGDs for compatibility, but obviously it's
not possible to check every single one. Which IGDs have you found to be incompatible, other than the ones with the BROADCAST issue? "Bill Wood" a écrit dans le message de ... I had the same problem, and as an old Networking hack, finally managed to get it to work. There are incompatabilities with Vista and some of the built-in DHCP servers in routers. As a result, kiss off automatic assignment of network settings for these routers (wireless or otherwise). You will have to MANUALLY set your IP info, just like in the old days. Unfortunately, that also means that you will have to CAN those adapter IP setting when using true DHCP enabled routers that actually work. Here is one solution that may work for SOME routers (but it does NOT work for all of them!) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928233/en-us The reality is that as long as you can connect to the router (i.e. local only connection) then the manual assignment of the IP info should get you there. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "Akram" wrote: I have been using wireless network fine until i tried to connect to a public hotspot and it appears as local only, no internet connection. I tried it with my mobile pc and WindowsXP and it works fine. I have checked this wireless hotspot is 801b which is a legacy, could it be that vista wireless connection software has a problem with legacy hotspots. |
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OK...Similar Problem here...
I work for a 25,000 student State University that has open access wireless, that requires authentication at the university's firewall. This normally appears as a window that requests user name and password as soon as you open a browser. Vista simply won't do this. There is no way to assign manual IPs to a student, and the software is not allowing anything past a local level only. What do I do? |
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I wish I could help you. However, your best bet is to read the posts in this
forum and elsewhere. Perhaps you will find a solution in one of them. Google can quickly narrow the search time for the other forums. If that doesn't help, then you have two choices. In the short run, either go back to Windows XP or forget wireless and have everyone use Ethernet cables. In the long run, wait for Vista SP1 to come out, whenever that will be - in the hope that a solution will become available. Frankly, I am a little surprised that a university would switch to Vista shortly after it was released. Not very prudent. "Rob" wrote in message ... OK...Similar Problem here... I work for a 25,000 student State University that has open access wireless, that requires authentication at the university's firewall. This normally appears as a window that requests user name and password as soon as you open a browser. Vista simply won't do this. There is no way to assign manual IPs to a student, and the software is not allowing anything past a local level only. What do I do? |