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Intermittent failure to recognize local network and internet in Vista. Overview. System = dsl 2-wire connection, into Speedstream 5100 DSL modem, into Linksys Etherfast cable/dsl router, connected to iMac, and to Vista Home Premium Dell XPS 410 (E6300/ i945 chipset w/ integrated NIC). This home network has existed fairly robustly for about 2 years. Abruptly on 9/18/09, began experiencing a pretty random loss of ability of the Vista box to find the local network or the internet connection. The problem persists to this day. Throughout, the connection to the iMac has stayed up. I have tried virtually everything (detailed below). Due to the random nature of the outages, it is pretty tough to figure out if any specific procedure has an effect. As of today, the only candidate for a fix is to power cycle the ROUTER. This is in spite of the fact that the problem persists when I bypass the router completely and just connect to the DSL modem directly. My theory du jour is that the network interface reset does not completely reset the network interface, and that the only way to completely reset the network interface is to drag down the NIC connection (with a powered-down modem connection). While I wouldn’t bet the farm on this, it has worked 3 times in a row, which is a whole lot better than the 73 other things I’ve tried. Details. Problem began on 9/18/09. Periodically, and pretty randomly, would lose the ability of the the Vista box to see the local network and the internet. That is, the network icon in the desktop tray would show no blue ball, and any attempt to connect would be met with an error message. Tried “diagnose and repair”, including resetting the NIC. No joy. Tried power-off rebooting of EVERYTHING (modem, router, both computers). This seemed to work some times. In retrospect, I think it was the problem just randomly coming and going. Tried “System restore” to earliest available restore point (suspecting a toxic Windows update). No joy. Tried a new system hard drive (reformat and clean install from scratch). No joy. Went back to the old hard drive and reformatted and clean installed on it. Loaded Vista from the Dell install disc (Feb 2007) and turned off updates. This is interesting. First time through, got a network connection. So I did the whole procedure over again (format, clean install, shut off updates). This time, no network connection. Note that with these clean installs, there was no anti-virus software reinstalled. I noted that when you restart, and even when you turn the power “off”, power remains applied to the motherboard. So, SRAM register stacks are not flushed by the act of turning the power off (unless the rest procedure correctly flushes them). Anyway, I started turning off and then unplugging the Vista box. Occasional success but nothing consistent, and, again, in retrospect, probably just the random nature of the problem. Finally, I tried unplugging only the router and then repowering it. This resets the router (which I don’t think is the problem because I saw the problem when I connected the PC directly to the DSL modem with no router. However, this also presents a load which drags down the NIC outputs. This probably tells the NIC to reboot. Apparently this hardware-driven reboot is more complete than the software-driven reset in the network manager. I have seen other posts remark that going to an external NIC card does not solve the problem. I have a USB NIC dongle which I intend to try after I get more of a handle on whether this modem reboot repeatably fixes the problem. If the other posters are correct, then I suspect that there is Ethernet hardware in the chipset which is inboard of the PCI bus connection, and that this is where the problem resides, thus, not affected by using an external PCI NIC. This is a very nasty problem, hard to troubleshoot, and totally cripples you. What good is a PC which you can’t connect to the internet? Comments from other poster???? -- bmwr90s |