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I bought a new computer with Windows Vista Home edition installed on it. Only
recently have I started having problems connecting to the Internet. It recogizes a Local Connection but not an Internet connection. After I do a "diagnose and repair" it can then access the Internet. Thing is, this happens EVERY freaking time I boot the computer or restart or resume! It is a freaking pain! I connect directly to my Speedstream DSL modem, no router or anything. I know my computer can connect to the Internet, as I can after the said "diagnose and repair" but why must I do this each time I use my computer? Surely there must be some setting I can use? It is really annoying after waiting for the startup to have to wait ten more minutes running the diagnose and repair before I can get online! I don't care about networks or anything... just online access. Help me! |
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derfman wrote:
I bought a new computer with Windows Vista Home edition installed on it. Only recently have I started having problems connecting to the Internet. It recogizes a Local Connection but not an Internet connection. After I do a "diagnose and repair" it can then access the Internet. Thing is, this happens EVERY freaking time I boot the computer or restart or resume! It is a freaking pain! I connect directly to my Speedstream DSL modem, no router or anything. I know my computer can connect to the Internet, as I can after the said "diagnose and repair" but why must I do this each time I use my computer? Surely there must be some setting I can use? It is really annoying after waiting for the startup to have to wait ten more minutes running the diagnose and repair before I can get online! I don't care about networks or anything... just online access. Help me! You say this happened recently. What changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? Also, what security/antivirus software do you have installed? If you have McAfee, uninstall it and if that solves the issue just replace it with a better program such as NOD32 or Kaspersky. Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
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No, no McAfee or anything. I have AVG for virus protection. I did update my
video drivers for my nVidia card. But it still worked for a day or two before the "diagnose and repair" issue started. I do play Warcraft regularly, but could it possibly be one of their hotfixes or patches? I hope not. Anyway, I will give it some time and then likely I will wipe and do a factory restore unless someone knows what's up. "Malke" wrote: You say this happened recently. What changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? Also, what security/antivirus software do you have installed? If you have McAfee, uninstall it and if that solves the issue just replace it with a better program such as NOD32 or Kaspersky. Malke |
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derfman wrote:
No, no McAfee or anything. I have AVG for virus protection. I did update my video drivers for my nVidia card. But it still worked for a day or two before the "diagnose and repair" issue started. I do play Warcraft regularly, but could it possibly be one of their hotfixes or patches? I hope not. Anyway, I will give it some time and then likely I will wipe and do a factory restore unless someone knows what's up. If you mean WoW, then check on their extremely active user forums to see if any recent patches have caused issues. If you mean Warcraft III, I don't think there have been any recent patches and certainly we don't have any issues here. Vista has some interesting troubleshooting things built in. Here are a few that might help you narrow down the cause of your problem. Of course, I wouldn't rule out that the NIC is failing either. Unless you have a laptop, you can always uninstall your NIC and swap it out for a known-working one and see if that makes a difference. Since NICs are so cheap (under $20USD), that's easy. Anyway, here are the links: Built-in Diagnostics: http://www.microsoft.com/windows/pro...agnostics.mspx Network Diagnostics and Troubleshooting http://www.microsoft.com/windows/pro...agnostics.mspx Windows Reliability and Performance Monitor (TechNet) http://tinyurl.com/2mlbws Event Viewer How To (TechNet) http://tinyurl.com/2jejzc HTH, Malke -- Elephant Boy Computers www.elephantboycomputers.com "Don't Panic!" MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User |
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Derfman,
I'm sorry you're experiencing trouble. Please tell me: a) when you Diagnose, what does Vista tell you the problem is; and b) when you see Repairs, what are the three repairs offered, and which do you choose? Also, is this a wired or wireless connection? "derfman" wrote: No, no McAfee or anything. I have AVG for virus protection. I did update my video drivers for my nVidia card. But it still worked for a day or two before the "diagnose and repair" issue started. I do play Warcraft regularly, but could it possibly be one of their hotfixes or patches? I hope not. Anyway, I will give it some time and then likely I will wipe and do a factory restore unless someone knows what's up. "Malke" wrote: You say this happened recently. What changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? Also, what security/antivirus software do you have installed? If you have McAfee, uninstall it and if that solves the issue just replace it with a better program such as NOD32 or Kaspersky. Malke |
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Since no one is replying i'm going to jump in. I actually just bought a new
Vusta Ready computer and I am having the same problem. This has been happening since i first connected the computer to the internet. Basically the only solution to the problem is to select diagnose and repair, and then select the option which renews the IP address (the first option on the top of the list). This is a pain, any help would be greatly appreciated. "Kim [MS]" wrote: Derfman, I'm sorry you're experiencing trouble. Please tell me: a) when you Diagnose, what does Vista tell you the problem is; and b) when you see Repairs, what are the three repairs offered, and which do you choose? Also, is this a wired or wireless connection? "derfman" wrote: No, no McAfee or anything. I have AVG for virus protection. I did update my video drivers for my nVidia card. But it still worked for a day or two before the "diagnose and repair" issue started. I do play Warcraft regularly, but could it possibly be one of their hotfixes or patches? I hope not. Anyway, I will give it some time and then likely I will wipe and do a factory restore unless someone knows what's up. "Malke" wrote: You say this happened recently. What changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? Also, what security/antivirus software do you have installed? If you have McAfee, uninstall it and if that solves the issue just replace it with a better program such as NOD32 or Kaspersky. Malke |
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Go to a command prompt and run "ipconfig /all".
Compare the output you get from when connectivity works with when it doesn't work. Post the results here. Have you looked at http://support.microsoft.com/default...b/928233/en-us to see if that could be the problem? Gary VanderMolen "Marty" wrote in message ... Since no one is replying i'm going to jump in. I actually just bought a new Vusta Ready computer and I am having the same problem. This has been happening since i first connected the computer to the internet. Basically the only solution to the problem is to select diagnose and repair, and then select the option which renews the IP address (the first option on the top of the list). This is a pain, any help would be greatly appreciated. "Kim [MS]" wrote: Derfman, I'm sorry you're experiencing trouble. Please tell me: a) when you Diagnose, what does Vista tell you the problem is; and b) when you see Repairs, what are the three repairs offered, and which do you choose? Also, is this a wired or wireless connection? "derfman" wrote: No, no McAfee or anything. I have AVG for virus protection. I did update my video drivers for my nVidia card. But it still worked for a day or two before the "diagnose and repair" issue started. I do play Warcraft regularly, but could it possibly be one of their hotfixes or patches? I hope not. Anyway, I will give it some time and then likely I will wipe and do a factory restore unless someone knows what's up. "Malke" wrote: You say this happened recently. What changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? Also, what security/antivirus software do you have installed? If you have McAfee, uninstall it and if that solves the issue just replace it with a better program such as NOD32 or Kaspersky. Malke |
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OK so I've had this problem since HP support made me reinstall windows.
Here's what I get when everything's working fine (after doing diagnose & repair, excluding things that don't change either way)... Wireless LAN adapter Wireless Network Connection 2: Lease Obtained. . . . . . . . . . : Friday, June 29, 2007 7:52:17 AM Lease Expires . . . . . . . . . . : Saturday, June 30, 2007 7:52:16 AM Default Gateway . . . . . . . . . : 192.168.1.1 Tunnel adapter Local Area Connection* 9: Connection-specific DNS Suffix . : IPv6 Address. . . . . . . . . . . : 2001:0:4136:e38c:1cea:3bc0:e7e9:6a8d(Pref erred) Link-local IPv6 Address . . . . . : fe80::1cea:3bc0:e7e9:6a8d%10(Preferred) Default Gateway . . . . . . . . . : :: NetBIOS over Tcpip. . . . . . . . : Disabled Here's what I get after restarting when I have local access only... Wireless LAN adapter Wireless Network Connection 2: Connection-specific DNS Suffix . : hsd1.wa.comcast.net. Description . . . . . . . . . . . : Intel(R) PRO/Wireless 3945ABG Network Con nection #2 Default Gateway . . . . . . . . . : Tunnel adapter Local Area Connection* 9: Media State . . . . . . . . . . . : Media disconnected *All the other stuff from above (when it was working) does not show up at all now (when it isn't working). Other than what I've listed above, all the other results matched up. "Gary VanderMolen" wrote: Go to a command prompt and run "ipconfig /all". Compare the output you get from when connectivity works with when it doesn't work. Post the results here. Have you looked at http://support.microsoft.com/default...b/928233/en-us to see if that could be the problem? Gary VanderMolen "Marty" wrote in message ... Since no one is replying i'm going to jump in. I actually just bought a new Vusta Ready computer and I am having the same problem. This has been happening since i first connected the computer to the internet. Basically the only solution to the problem is to select diagnose and repair, and then select the option which renews the IP address (the first option on the top of the list). This is a pain, any help would be greatly appreciated. "Kim [MS]" wrote: Derfman, I'm sorry you're experiencing trouble. Please tell me: a) when you Diagnose, what does Vista tell you the problem is; and b) when you see Repairs, what are the three repairs offered, and which do you choose? Also, is this a wired or wireless connection? "derfman" wrote: No, no McAfee or anything. I have AVG for virus protection. I did update my video drivers for my nVidia card. But it still worked for a day or two before the "diagnose and repair" issue started. I do play Warcraft regularly, but could it possibly be one of their hotfixes or patches? I hope not. Anyway, I will give it some time and then likely I will wipe and do a factory restore unless someone knows what's up. "Malke" wrote: You say this happened recently. What changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? Also, what security/antivirus software do you have installed? If you have McAfee, uninstall it and if that solves the issue just replace it with a better program such as NOD32 or Kaspersky. Malke |
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I had this issue with my ABIT Fatal1ty on-board NIC, and I could never get it
working. I tried every driver I could lay my hands on. I finally installed an Intel gigabit NIC and it works first time, every time. My issue was coming out of sleep, the network would be scrambled and only restarting the NIC would get it running again. On Fri, 29 Jun 2007 08:28:02 -0700, Phillip wrote: OK so I've had this problem since HP support made me reinstall windows. Here's what I get when everything's working fine (after doing diagnose & repair, excluding things that don't change either way)... Wireless LAN adapter Wireless Network Connection 2: Lease Obtained. . . . . . . . . . : Friday, June 29, 2007 7:52:17 AM Lease Expires . . . . . . . . . . : Saturday, June 30, 2007 7:52:16 AM Default Gateway . . . . . . . . . : 192.168.1.1 Tunnel adapter Local Area Connection* 9: Connection-specific DNS Suffix . : IPv6 Address. . . . . . . . . . . : 2001:0:4136:e38c:1cea:3bc0:e7e9:6a8d(Pref erred) Link-local IPv6 Address . . . . . : fe80::1cea:3bc0:e7e9:6a8d%10(Preferred) Default Gateway . . . . . . . . . : :: NetBIOS over Tcpip. . . . . . . . : Disabled Here's what I get after restarting when I have local access only... Wireless LAN adapter Wireless Network Connection 2: Connection-specific DNS Suffix . : hsd1.wa.comcast.net. Description . . . . . . . . . . . : Intel(R) PRO/Wireless 3945ABG Network Con nection #2 Default Gateway . . . . . . . . . : Tunnel adapter Local Area Connection* 9: Media State . . . . . . . . . . . : Media disconnected *All the other stuff from above (when it was working) does not show up at all now (when it isn't working). Other than what I've listed above, all the other results matched up. "Gary VanderMolen" wrote: Go to a command prompt and run "ipconfig /all". Compare the output you get from when connectivity works with when it doesn't work. Post the results here. Have you looked at http://support.microsoft.com/default...b/928233/en-us to see if that could be the problem? Gary VanderMolen "Marty" wrote in message ... Since no one is replying i'm going to jump in. I actually just bought a new Vusta Ready computer and I am having the same problem. This has been happening since i first connected the computer to the internet. Basically the only solution to the problem is to select diagnose and repair, and then select the option which renews the IP address (the first option on the top of the list). This is a pain, any help would be greatly appreciated. "Kim [MS]" wrote: Derfman, I'm sorry you're experiencing trouble. Please tell me: a) when you Diagnose, what does Vista tell you the problem is; and b) when you see Repairs, what are the three repairs offered, and which do you choose? Also, is this a wired or wireless connection? "derfman" wrote: No, no McAfee or anything. I have AVG for virus protection. I did update my video drivers for my nVidia card. But it still worked for a day or two before the "diagnose and repair" issue started. I do play Warcraft regularly, but could it possibly be one of their hotfixes or patches? I hope not. Anyway, I will give it some time and then likely I will wipe and do a factory restore unless someone knows what's up. "Malke" wrote: You say this happened recently. What changed between the time things worked and the time they didn't? Also, what security/antivirus software do you have installed? If you have McAfee, uninstall it and if that solves the issue just replace it with a better program such as NOD32 or Kaspersky. Malke John Will Microsoft MVP - Networking |
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