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This has happened four times in the last week to my Vista Home Premium
SP1 (with all updates). I appear to be connected to the Internet. I can surf about half the items in my Favorites (using Firefox 3) and navigate their web sites BUT some of my Favorites will give me a "timed out" page. It is never the same ones when this starts. At the time this happens, IE7 won't go to the same sites that time out on Firefox. I am still able to view all my other computers (and some web sites) so it is, in fact, still connected to my LAN and the Internet. After I clear all saved pages and whatnot, on the sites that still connect I can navigate them fully. This happens whether I am connected wireless or wired (after turning off the wireless transponder). Rebooting will always clear the problem, but if any one knows WHY this is happing I'd appreciate some insight. TCP/IPv4 and 6 are both implemented under 'Properties' of the connection. GP |
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Grand_Poobah wrote:
This has happened four times in the last week to my Vista Home Premium SP1 (with all updates). I appear to be connected to the Internet. I can surf about half the items in my Favorites (using Firefox 3) and navigate their web sites BUT some of my Favorites will give me a "timed out" page. It is never the same ones when this starts. At the time this happens, IE7 won't go to the same sites that time out on Firefox. I am still able to view all my other computers (and some web sites) so it is, in fact, still connected to my LAN and the Internet. After I clear all saved pages and whatnot, on the sites that still connect I can navigate them fully. This happens whether I am connected wireless or wired (after turning off the wireless transponder). Rebooting will always clear the problem, but if any one knows WHY this is happing I'd appreciate some insight. TCP/IPv4 and 6 are both implemented under 'Properties' of the connection. Try disabling IPv6 and see if that makes a difference. MVP Barb Bowman http://digitalmediaphile.wordpress.c...windows-vista/ How to remove IPv6 and Tunnel completely on Vista - www.howtonetworking.com/vista/vistaipconfig.htm Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
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Grand_Poobah wrote: This has happened four times in the last week to my Vista Home Premium SP1 (with all updates). I appear to be connected to the Internet. I can surf about half the items in my Favorites (using Firefox 3) and navigate their web sites BUT some of my Favorites will give me a "timed out" page. It is never the same ones when this starts. At the time this happens, IE7 won't go to the same sites that time out on Firefox. I am still able to view all my other computers (and some web sites) so it is, in fact, still connected to my LAN and the Internet. After I clear all saved pages and whatnot, on the sites that still connect I can navigate them fully. This happens whether I am connected wireless or wired (after turning off the wireless transponder). Rebooting will always clear the problem, but if any one knows WHY this is happing I'd appreciate some insight. TCP/IPv4 and 6 are both implemented under 'Properties' of the connection. Try disabling IPv6 and see if that makes a difference. MVP Barb Bowman http://digitalmediaphile.wordpress.c...windows-vista/ How to remove IPv6 and Tunnel completely on Vista - www.howtonetworking.com/vista/vistaipconfig.htm Malke I should have mentioned before that I briefly tried to disable IPv6, but when I restarted the computer - wireless - the process hung so badly that I had to kill it. There were no entires in the Event Log telling me why but it definitely hung. When I turned it back on again and restarted, connection began almost immediately. That scared me off enough that I didn't try it with a wired connection. It seems as if something is telling my browser to use an invalid DNS address at times even though I have always used my router's address as the DNS server on all my other (XP) computers. The message I get on the browser status bar is "Looking up [whatever].com". GP |
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Grand_Poobah wrote:
--- Grand_Poobah wrote: This has happened four times in the last week to my Vista Home Premium SP1 (with all updates). I appear to be connected to the Internet. I can surf about half the items in my Favorites (using Firefox 3) and navigate their web sites BUT some of my Favorites will give me a "timed out" page. It is never the same ones when this starts. At the time this happens, IE7 won't go to the same sites that time out on Firefox. I am still able to view all my other computers (and some web sites) so it is, in fact, still connected to my LAN and the Internet. After I clear all saved pages and whatnot, on the sites that still connect I can navigate them fully. This happens whether I am connected wireless or wired (after turning off the wireless transponder). Rebooting will always clear the problem, but if any one knows WHY this is happing I'd appreciate some insight. TCP/IPv4 and 6 are both implemented under 'Properties' of the connection. Try disabling IPv6 and see if that makes a difference. MVP Barb Bowman http://digitalmediaphile.wordpress.c...windows-vista/ How to remove IPv6 and Tunnel completely on Vista - www.howtonetworking.com/vista/vistaipconfig.htm I should have mentioned before that I briefly tried to disable IPv6, but when I restarted the computer - wireless - the process hung so badly that I had to kill it. There were no entires in the Event Log telling me why but it definitely hung. When I turned it back on again and restarted, connection began almost immediately. That scared me off enough that I didn't try it with a wired connection. It seems as if something is telling my browser to use an invalid DNS address at times even though I have always used my router's address as the DNS server on all my other (XP) computers. The message I get on the browser status bar is "Looking up [whatever].com". Yes, saying what you already tried in your first post is A Good Thing and Saves Time. The First Question Of Troubleshooting: If the problem is new, what changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? The Second Question of Windows Troubleshooting: what is the malware/virus status of the machine? If you think it is clean, what programs (and versions) did you use to determine this? Be sure the computer is clean: http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/...moving_Malware Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
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Grand_Poobah wrote: --- Grand_Poobah wrote: This has happened four times in the last week to my Vista Home Premium SP1 (with all updates). I appear to be connected to the Internet. I can surf about half the items in my Favorites (using Firefox 3) and navigate their web sites BUT some of my Favorites will give me a "timed out" page. It is never the same ones when this starts. At the time this happens, IE7 won't go to the same sites that time out on Firefox. I am still able to view all my other computers (and some web sites) so it is, in fact, still connected to my LAN and the Internet. After I clear all saved pages and whatnot, on the sites that still connect I can navigate them fully. This happens whether I am connected wireless or wired (after turning off the wireless transponder). Rebooting will always clear the problem, but if any one knows WHY this is happing I'd appreciate some insight. TCP/IPv4 and 6 are both implemented under 'Properties' of the connection. Try disabling IPv6 and see if that makes a difference. MVP Barb Bowman http://digitalmediaphile.wordpress.c...windows-vista/ How to remove IPv6 and Tunnel completely on Vista - www.howtonetworking.com/vista/vistaipconfig.htm I should have mentioned before that I briefly tried to disable IPv6, but when I restarted the computer - wireless - the process hung so badly that I had to kill it. There were no entires in the Event Log telling me why but it definitely hung. When I turned it back on again and restarted, connection began almost immediately. That scared me off enough that I didn't try it with a wired connection. It seems as if something is telling my browser to use an invalid DNS address at times even though I have always used my router's address as the DNS server on all my other (XP) computers. The message I get on the browser status bar is "Looking up [whatever].com". Yes, saying what you already tried in your first post is A Good Thing and Saves Time. The First Question Of Troubleshooting: If the problem is new, what changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? The Second Question of Windows Troubleshooting: what is the malware/virus status of the machine? If you think it is clean, what programs (and versions) did you use to determine this? Be sure the computer is clean: http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/...moving_Malware Malke Aha! Got it! Your "What changed?" question hit home. When I was visiting my daughter down South late last month, we had to alter my IP connections slightly in order for me to connect to her LAN. She runs DHCP and I don't so we did all the normal things to change the connection method, but one thing I forgot to do when I got back was to remove the "Alternate DNS Server". Her LAN gateway/router runs as 192.168.0.1 and mine is 192.168.1.1. When I got back I just changed the Primary and forgot to change the Secondary. So, when I started up the computer, I think it got confused as to which one really was valid and started messing up. That, in itself, may not have caused the problem, but further research into just how DNS works led me to finding the improper entry. The two of us spent a while on the phone solving this one. My computer has been online today for six hours and not a single glitch. I'll post back tomorrow after leaving my email client on all night. It scans five email accounts on three different servers. GP |
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Grand_Poobah wrote:
--- Grand_Poobah wrote: --- Grand_Poobah wrote: This has happened four times in the last week to my Vista Home Premium SP1 (with all updates). I appear to be connected to the Internet. I can surf about half the items in my Favorites (using Firefox 3) and navigate their web sites BUT some of my Favorites will give me a "timed out" page. It is never the same ones when this starts. At the time this happens, IE7 won't go to the same sites that time out on Firefox. I am still able to view all my other computers (and some web sites) so it is, in fact, still connected to my LAN and the Internet. After I clear all saved pages and whatnot, on the sites that still connect I can navigate them fully. This happens whether I am connected wireless or wired (after turning off the wireless transponder). Rebooting will always clear the problem, but if any one knows WHY this is happing I'd appreciate some insight. TCP/IPv4 and 6 are both implemented under 'Properties' of the connection. Try disabling IPv6 and see if that makes a difference. MVP Barb Bowman http://digitalmediaphile.wordpress.c...windows-vista/ How to remove IPv6 and Tunnel completely on Vista - www.howtonetworking.com/vista/vistaipconfig.htm I should have mentioned before that I briefly tried to disable IPv6, but when I restarted the computer - wireless - the process hung so badly that I had to kill it. There were no entires in the Event Log telling me why but it definitely hung. When I turned it back on again and restarted, connection began almost immediately. That scared me off enough that I didn't try it with a wired connection. It seems as if something is telling my browser to use an invalid DNS address at times even though I have always used my router's address as the DNS server on all my other (XP) computers. The message I get on the browser status bar is "Looking up [whatever].com". Yes, saying what you already tried in your first post is A Good Thing and Saves Time. The First Question Of Troubleshooting: If the problem is new, what changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? The Second Question of Windows Troubleshooting: what is the malware/virus status of the machine? If you think it is clean, what programs (and versions) did you use to determine this? Be sure the computer is clean: http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/...moving_Malware Malke Aha! Got it! Your "What changed?" question hit home. When I was visiting my daughter down South late last month, we had to alter my IP connections slightly in order for me to connect to her LAN. She runs DHCP and I don't so we did all the normal things to change the connection method, but one thing I forgot to do when I got back was to remove the "Alternate DNS Server". Her LAN gateway/router runs as 192.168.0.1 and mine is 192.168.1.1. When I got back I just changed the Primary and forgot to change the Secondary. So, when I started up the computer, I think it got confused as to which one really was valid and started messing up. That, in itself, may not have caused the problem, but further research into just how DNS works led me to finding the improper entry. The two of us spent a while on the phone solving this one. My computer has been online today for six hours and not a single glitch. I'll post back tomorrow after leaving my email client on all night. It scans five email accounts on three different servers. Well, there you go! I'm glad you got it sorted. Thanks very much for posting your solution. Malke -- MS-MVP Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic! FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ |
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Grand_Poobah wrote: --- Grand_Poobah wrote: --- Grand_Poobah wrote: This has happened four times in the last week to my Vista Home Premium SP1 (with all updates). I appear to be connected to the Internet. I can surf about half the items in my Favorites (using Firefox 3) and navigate their web sites BUT some of my Favorites will give me a "timed out" page. It is never the same ones when this starts. At the time this happens, IE7 won't go to the same sites that time out on Firefox. I am still able to view all my other computers (and some web sites) so it is, in fact, still connected to my LAN and the Internet. After I clear all saved pages and whatnot, on the sites that still connect I can navigate them fully. This happens whether I am connected wireless or wired (after turning off the wireless transponder). Rebooting will always clear the problem, but if any one knows WHY this is happing I'd appreciate some insight. TCP/IPv4 and 6 are both implemented under 'Properties' of the connection. Try disabling IPv6 and see if that makes a difference. MVP Barb Bowman http://digitalmediaphile.wordpress.c...windows-vista/ How to remove IPv6 and Tunnel completely on Vista - www.howtonetworking.com/vista/vistaipconfig.htm I should have mentioned before that I briefly tried to disable IPv6, but when I restarted the computer - wireless - the process hung so badly that I had to kill it. There were no entires in the Event Log telling me why but it definitely hung. When I turned it back on again and restarted, connection began almost immediately. That scared me off enough that I didn't try it with a wired connection. It seems as if something is telling my browser to use an invalid DNS address at times even though I have always used my router's address as the DNS server on all my other (XP) computers. The message I get on the browser status bar is "Looking up [whatever].com". Yes, saying what you already tried in your first post is A Good Thing and Saves Time. The First Question Of Troubleshooting: If the problem is new, what changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? The Second Question of Windows Troubleshooting: what is the malware/virus status of the machine? If you think it is clean, what programs (and versions) did you use to determine this? Be sure the computer is clean: http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/...moving_Malware Malke Aha! Got it! Your "What changed?" question hit home. When I was visiting my daughter down South late last month, we had to alter my IP connections slightly in order for me to connect to her LAN. She runs DHCP and I don't so we did all the normal things to change the connection method, but one thing I forgot to do when I got back was to remove the "Alternate DNS Server". Her LAN gateway/router runs as 192.168.0.1 and mine is 192.168.1.1. When I got back I just changed the Primary and forgot to change the Secondary. So, when I started up the computer, I think it got confused as to which one really was valid and started messing up. That, in itself, may not have caused the problem, but further research into just how DNS works led me to finding the improper entry. The two of us spent a while on the phone solving this one. My computer has been online today for six hours and not a single glitch. I'll post back tomorrow after leaving my email client on all night. It scans five email accounts on three different servers. Well, there you go! I'm glad you got it sorted. Thanks very much for posting your solution. Malke Not a single glitch in 48 hours. That must have been the problem. It's the little things that really try one's patience. GP |