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I have a new Vista premium Fujitsu Siemens laptop bought for my parents. I am
setting it up to run on boot, mail and internet explorer with 8 tabs open so that the amount of typing and clicking they have to do is minimised. However the laptop does not appear to allow connection to a wireless connection at start up. Instead you have to wait until it fails click on the network icon in the system tray diagnose why windows cannot find any network; wait for vista to work out that there is no wirelss connectivity, click on the repair wireless connectivity then vista repair itself. Fujitsu state that this is a feature of XP (!). Question 1 Can I switch on the connectiivity on startup to allow this to happen seamlessly. Question 2 If this is not possible is there some way of creating a shortcut which would allow the click of one button rather than going through the learning experience each time that the connectivity requires to be switched on. |
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Hi,
If I correctly understood, your problem is that you wireless connection to your router is not restored when windows starts. If yes then it seems you're having the same problem I did. If you use the automatic settings in the tcp/ip protocol, change it to manual and enter all the information, ip, subnet mask, gateway and dns if you use it. ....at least it worked for me. Paul "Draag2" wrote: I have a new Vista premium Fujitsu Siemens laptop bought for my parents. I am setting it up to run on boot, mail and internet explorer with 8 tabs open so that the amount of typing and clicking they have to do is minimised. However the laptop does not appear to allow connection to a wireless connection at start up. Instead you have to wait until it fails click on the network icon in the system tray diagnose why windows cannot find any network; wait for vista to work out that there is no wirelss connectivity, click on the repair wireless connectivity then vista repair itself. Fujitsu state that this is a feature of XP (!). Question 1 Can I switch on the connectiivity on startup to allow this to happen seamlessly. Question 2 If this is not possible is there some way of creating a shortcut which would allow the click of one button rather than going through the learning experience each time that the connectivity requires to be switched on. |
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Thanks PaulV but I am not using DHCP and have three other PCs connected
wirelelssly through a linksys wireless usb adapter. It appears to be a feature of the laptop. "PaulV" wrote: Hi, If I correctly understood, your problem is that you wireless connection to your router is not restored when windows starts. If yes then it seems you're having the same problem I did. If you use the automatic settings in the tcp/ip protocol, change it to manual and enter all the information, ip, subnet mask, gateway and dns if you use it. ...at least it worked for me. Paul "Draag2" wrote: I have a new Vista premium Fujitsu Siemens laptop bought for my parents. I am setting it up to run on boot, mail and internet explorer with 8 tabs open so that the amount of typing and clicking they have to do is minimised. However the laptop does not appear to allow connection to a wireless connection at start up. Instead you have to wait until it fails click on the network icon in the system tray diagnose why windows cannot find any network; wait for vista to work out that there is no wirelss connectivity, click on the repair wireless connectivity then vista repair itself. Fujitsu state that this is a feature of XP (!). Question 1 Can I switch on the connectiivity on startup to allow this to happen seamlessly. Question 2 If this is not possible is there some way of creating a shortcut which would allow the click of one button rather than going through the learning experience each time that the connectivity requires to be switched on. |
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Do you use any WEP or WPA encryption?
"Draag2" wrote: Thanks PaulV but I am not using DHCP and have three other PCs connected wirelelssly through a linksys wireless usb adapter. It appears to be a feature of the laptop. "PaulV" wrote: Hi, If I correctly understood, your problem is that you wireless connection to your router is not restored when windows starts. If yes then it seems you're having the same problem I did. If you use the automatic settings in the tcp/ip protocol, change it to manual and enter all the information, ip, subnet mask, gateway and dns if you use it. ...at least it worked for me. Paul "Draag2" wrote: I have a new Vista premium Fujitsu Siemens laptop bought for my parents. I am setting it up to run on boot, mail and internet explorer with 8 tabs open so that the amount of typing and clicking they have to do is minimised. However the laptop does not appear to allow connection to a wireless connection at start up. Instead you have to wait until it fails click on the network icon in the system tray diagnose why windows cannot find any network; wait for vista to work out that there is no wirelss connectivity, click on the repair wireless connectivity then vista repair itself. Fujitsu state that this is a feature of XP (!). Question 1 Can I switch on the connectiivity on startup to allow this to happen seamlessly. Question 2 If this is not possible is there some way of creating a shortcut which would allow the click of one button rather than going through the learning experience each time that the connectivity requires to be switched on. |
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Yes I have WEP but that is not the issue
The laptop switches off connectivity, Vista looks and says "Turn on wireless capability" and starts quite happily thereafter. If I could establish the routine that Vista uses then I could include it at Startup or create a shortcut on the desktop. "PaulV" wrote: Do you use any WEP or WPA encryption? "Draag2" wrote: Thanks PaulV but I am not using DHCP and have three other PCs connected wirelelssly through a linksys wireless usb adapter. It appears to be a feature of the laptop. "PaulV" wrote: Hi, If I correctly understood, your problem is that you wireless connection to your router is not restored when windows starts. If yes then it seems you're having the same problem I did. If you use the automatic settings in the tcp/ip protocol, change it to manual and enter all the information, ip, subnet mask, gateway and dns if you use it. ...at least it worked for me. Paul "Draag2" wrote: I have a new Vista premium Fujitsu Siemens laptop bought for my parents. I am setting it up to run on boot, mail and internet explorer with 8 tabs open so that the amount of typing and clicking they have to do is minimised. However the laptop does not appear to allow connection to a wireless connection at start up. Instead you have to wait until it fails click on the network icon in the system tray diagnose why windows cannot find any network; wait for vista to work out that there is no wirelss connectivity, click on the repair wireless connectivity then vista repair itself. Fujitsu state that this is a feature of XP (!). Question 1 Can I switch on the connectiivity on startup to allow this to happen seamlessly. Question 2 If this is not possible is there some way of creating a shortcut which would allow the click of one button rather than going through the learning experience each time that the connectivity requires to be switched on. |
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Draag, do you have "Connect automatically when this network is in range"
selected in the wireless network properties? (In Network and Sharing Center, click "Manage wireless networks" and then right-click the connection and click Properties.) No, this is not normal Vista behavior. I suppose it's possible that it is some "feature" of your NIC. Thanks, Gloria -- Gloria Boyer Windows User Assistance Microsoft Corporation "Draag2" wrote in message ... Yes I have WEP but that is not the issue The laptop switches off connectivity, Vista looks and says "Turn on wireless capability" and starts quite happily thereafter. If I could establish the routine that Vista uses then I could include it at Startup or create a shortcut on the desktop. "PaulV" wrote: Do you use any WEP or WPA encryption? "Draag2" wrote: Thanks PaulV but I am not using DHCP and have three other PCs connected wirelelssly through a linksys wireless usb adapter. It appears to be a feature of the laptop. "PaulV" wrote: Hi, If I correctly understood, your problem is that you wireless connection to your router is not restored when windows starts. If yes then it seems you're having the same problem I did. If you use the automatic settings in the tcp/ip protocol, change it to manual and enter all the information, ip, subnet mask, gateway and dns if you use it. ...at least it worked for me. Paul "Draag2" wrote: I have a new Vista premium Fujitsu Siemens laptop bought for my parents. I am setting it up to run on boot, mail and internet explorer with 8 tabs open so that the amount of typing and clicking they have to do is minimised. However the laptop does not appear to allow connection to a wireless connection at start up. Instead you have to wait until it fails click on the network icon in the system tray diagnose why windows cannot find any network; wait for vista to work out that there is no wirelss connectivity, click on the repair wireless connectivity then vista repair itself. Fujitsu state that this is a feature of XP (!). Question 1 Can I switch on the connectiivity on startup to allow this to happen seamlessly. Question 2 If this is not possible is there some way of creating a shortcut which would allow the click of one button rather than going through the learning experience each time that the connectivity requires to be switched on. |