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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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If you have a wireless access point, and you KNOW it works on other
computers, but you get a "local only" message from Vista, the built-in DHCP router in your Wireless Access Point probably is NOT compatible with Vista... 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 If this does not work, and you still get the "local only" message, but you KNOW the access point works with XP wireless, etc., then MANUALLY SET the IP address info. Unfortunately, if you have to manually set the IP info, you will have to delete those settings with other wireless access points. And let me say one more time, DO NOT waste your time with the Alternate IP configuration, it doesn't work! http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928152/en-us ; (affects mostly wireless on laptops) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929847/en-us ; (Vista and XP together in a wireless environment) If your Gateway is on a different subnet (usually locations with large numbers of wireless spots such as businesses, universities, etc.) then you may have connection problems that FORCE you to manually configure your IP settings on the adapter. This is a FIX for XP SP2 that doesn't look like it made it into Vista, so, if you are experiencing this problem, LIKE ME, then you have no choice but to manually configure the IP settings. http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=822596 If you are having periodic connection problems (and you know they didn't exist before), Vista has changed the Automitic IP Address discovery timing to be almost instantaneous. So if you have an older wireless access point, or one that has long broadcast / "handshake" times, then you may have trouble because of this "improvement." http://support.microsoft.com/kb/931550/en-us ; (MS Does not provide a solution, only info. Like the other options, you will likely have to MANUALLY set up your IP info in the adapter, or purchase a new wireless access point.) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929824/en-us ; (problems if you have the SAME Gateway address as the one assigned to the computer you are trying to connect to the Wireless spot). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To see your adapter info, use a command prompt window (Start Run type in CMD) and then type: ipconfig /all Find your network adapter and write down the Gateway, DNS, IP Address, and other settings. Also, go to the EVENT VIEWER and see if there are any messages related to you trying to connect to your wireless adapter at the times you tried to connect. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Regardless of the problem, if you KNOW the wireless spot works, and you had little or no trouble on XP, try MANUALLY setting up the IP info for that wireless access point. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I'm VERY disappointed at how many problems there are with the Vista wireless networking. Especially when SO MANY of the early Vista users are exactly the same customer base that USES WIRELESS! |
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I have no problem to connect to network with wired connection.
I tried to bypass DHCP by changing to static ip, but the new ip address wan't shown in ipconfig / all. "Bill Wood" wrote: If you have a wireless access point, and you KNOW it works on other computers, but you get a "local only" message from Vista, the built-in DHCP router in your Wireless Access Point probably is NOT compatible with Vista... 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 If this does not work, and you still get the "local only" message, but you KNOW the access point works with XP wireless, etc., then MANUALLY SET the IP address info. Unfortunately, if you have to manually set the IP info, you will have to delete those settings with other wireless access points. And let me say one more time, DO NOT waste your time with the Alternate IP configuration, it doesn't work! http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928152/en-us ; (affects mostly wireless on laptops) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929847/en-us ; (Vista and XP together in a wireless environment) If your Gateway is on a different subnet (usually locations with large numbers of wireless spots such as businesses, universities, etc.) then you may have connection problems that FORCE you to manually configure your IP settings on the adapter. This is a FIX for XP SP2 that doesn't look like it made it into Vista, so, if you are experiencing this problem, LIKE ME, then you have no choice but to manually configure the IP settings. http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=822596 If you are having periodic connection problems (and you know they didn't exist before), Vista has changed the Automitic IP Address discovery timing to be almost instantaneous. So if you have an older wireless access point, or one that has long broadcast / "handshake" times, then you may have trouble because of this "improvement." http://support.microsoft.com/kb/931550/en-us ; (MS Does not provide a solution, only info. Like the other options, you will likely have to MANUALLY set up your IP info in the adapter, or purchase a new wireless access point.) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929824/en-us ; (problems if you have the SAME Gateway address as the one assigned to the computer you are trying to connect to the Wireless spot). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To see your adapter info, use a command prompt window (Start Run type in CMD) and then type: ipconfig /all Find your network adapter and write down the Gateway, DNS, IP Address, and other settings. Also, go to the EVENT VIEWER and see if there are any messages related to you trying to connect to your wireless adapter at the times you tried to connect. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Regardless of the problem, if you KNOW the wireless spot works, and you had little or no trouble on XP, try MANUALLY setting up the IP info for that wireless access point. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I'm VERY disappointed at how many problems there are with the Vista wireless networking. Especially when SO MANY of the early Vista users are exactly the same customer base that USES WIRELESS! |
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Thank you for the links.
Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Bill Wood" wrote in message ... If you have a wireless access point, and you KNOW it works on other computers, but you get a "local only" message from Vista, the built-in DHCP router in your Wireless Access Point probably is NOT compatible with Vista... 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 If this does not work, and you still get the "local only" message, but you KNOW the access point works with XP wireless, etc., then MANUALLY SET the IP address info. Unfortunately, if you have to manually set the IP info, you will have to delete those settings with other wireless access points. And let me say one more time, DO NOT waste your time with the Alternate IP configuration, it doesn't work! http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928152/en-us ; (affects mostly wireless on laptops) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929847/en-us ; (Vista and XP together in a wireless environment) If your Gateway is on a different subnet (usually locations with large numbers of wireless spots such as businesses, universities, etc.) then you may have connection problems that FORCE you to manually configure your IP settings on the adapter. This is a FIX for XP SP2 that doesn't look like it made it into Vista, so, if you are experiencing this problem, LIKE ME, then you have no choice but to manually configure the IP settings. http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=822596 If you are having periodic connection problems (and you know they didn't exist before), Vista has changed the Automitic IP Address discovery timing to be almost instantaneous. So if you have an older wireless access point, or one that has long broadcast / "handshake" times, then you may have trouble because of this "improvement." http://support.microsoft.com/kb/931550/en-us ; (MS Does not provide a solution, only info. Like the other options, you will likely have to MANUALLY set up your IP info in the adapter, or purchase a new wireless access point.) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929824/en-us ; (problems if you have the SAME Gateway address as the one assigned to the computer you are trying to connect to the Wireless spot). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To see your adapter info, use a command prompt window (Start Run type in CMD) and then type: ipconfig /all Find your network adapter and write down the Gateway, DNS, IP Address, and other settings. Also, go to the EVENT VIEWER and see if there are any messages related to you trying to connect to your wireless adapter at the times you tried to connect. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Regardless of the problem, if you KNOW the wireless spot works, and you had little or no trouble on XP, try MANUALLY setting up the IP info for that wireless access point. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I'm VERY disappointed at how many problems there are with the Vista wireless networking. Especially when SO MANY of the early Vista users are exactly the same customer base that USES WIRELESS! |
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Yes, these are great resources, BUT my problems are in reverse. I leave
wireless off unless I want to use it. I had a DLink DI624 and when I turned wireless on the router would reboot continuously. I bought a Linksys WRT54G, and when wireless is on the wireless connection cycles, but all of the hard wired computers are dropped. I have to turn off the wireless, and go though the network repair in Vista to get it back. If I leave the Vista computer off, and turn on wireless from an XP computer, it works fine. I am working with linksys, but they are confused, too. Tony "Robert L [MVP - Networking]" wrote in message ... Thank you for the links. Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com "Bill Wood" wrote in message ... If you have a wireless access point, and you KNOW it works on other computers, but you get a "local only" message from Vista, the built-in DHCP router in your Wireless Access Point probably is NOT compatible with Vista... 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 If this does not work, and you still get the "local only" message, but you KNOW the access point works with XP wireless, etc., then MANUALLY SET the IP address info. Unfortunately, if you have to manually set the IP info, you will have to delete those settings with other wireless access points. And let me say one more time, DO NOT waste your time with the Alternate IP configuration, it doesn't work! http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928152/en-us ; (affects mostly wireless on laptops) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929847/en-us ; (Vista and XP together in a wireless environment) If your Gateway is on a different subnet (usually locations with large numbers of wireless spots such as businesses, universities, etc.) then you may have connection problems that FORCE you to manually configure your IP settings on the adapter. This is a FIX for XP SP2 that doesn't look like it made it into Vista, so, if you are experiencing this problem, LIKE ME, then you have no choice but to manually configure the IP settings. http://support.microsoft.com/?kbid=822596 If you are having periodic connection problems (and you know they didn't exist before), Vista has changed the Automitic IP Address discovery timing to be almost instantaneous. So if you have an older wireless access point, or one that has long broadcast / "handshake" times, then you may have trouble because of this "improvement." http://support.microsoft.com/kb/931550/en-us ; (MS Does not provide a solution, only info. Like the other options, you will likely have to MANUALLY set up your IP info in the adapter, or purchase a new wireless access point.) http://support.microsoft.com/kb/929824/en-us ; (problems if you have the SAME Gateway address as the one assigned to the computer you are trying to connect to the Wireless spot). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ To see your adapter info, use a command prompt window (Start Run type in CMD) and then type: ipconfig /all Find your network adapter and write down the Gateway, DNS, IP Address, and other settings. Also, go to the EVENT VIEWER and see if there are any messages related to you trying to connect to your wireless adapter at the times you tried to connect. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Regardless of the problem, if you KNOW the wireless spot works, and you had little or no trouble on XP, try MANUALLY setting up the IP info for that wireless access point. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I'm VERY disappointed at how many problems there are with the Vista wireless networking. Especially when SO MANY of the early Vista users are exactly the same customer base that USES WIRELESS! |
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"Tony Linguini" wrote in message ... Yes, these are great resources, BUT my problems are in reverse. I leave wireless off unless I want to use it. I had a DLink DI624 and when I turned wireless on the router would reboot continuously. I bought a Linksys WRT54G, and when wireless is on the wireless connection cycles, but all of the hard wired computers are dropped. I have to turn off the wireless, and go though the network repair in Vista to get it back. If I leave the Vista computer off, and turn on wireless from an XP computer, it works fine. I am working with linksys, but they are confused, too. Delete and reinstall the networking on every machine. I encountered a phantom number in an XP config not too long ago. I had previously had a machine connected to my router, fixed it and given it back after manually changing the tcp/ip to auto and OKing it. My router is set not to allow dhcp so when I got this computer back I expected it not to work when plugged in but it did, instantly. There was no static IP address in the main section or the alternate addressing. So, I did a reset of all networking on the computer even though it all showed it was set to factory condition only and after that it acted as suspected. You may be having issues where one or more machines are competing for the same IP address even though it doesn't show any on the machines. |