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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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Below is from a post here from May/07. I have the same thing. The only thing not mentioned is when I got to Task Manager to look it over and select the Networking tab it shows a blank and it's all over but the crying. I have to ctrl/alt/del again and end task the task manager and do a re-start to get going again. ================================= My problem has to do with my wireless networking connection suddenly and without reason losing connection to the internet while still being connected to the LAN, or at least SAYING it's connected to the LAN when in fact it has completely locked up. On XP this was resolved 60% of the time by "repairing" the connection. Other times that would cause the entire system to lock up, or fail to do anything so the only way to get my connection back was to reboot the computer. On Vista, you can't "repair" the same way you could in XP (Vista diagnoses the problem and comes up with 3 solutions that are not the problem and makes no attempt to repair). Manually disconnecting causes it to lock up. A few times I have fixed it by unplugging my adapter and then reconnecting it after a moment. I would try /release /renew but for some reason it keeps telling me the action can not be performed when there is no connection, even though it's connected with limited connectivity (in my experience this just means the DHCP didn't assign the IP address correctly). Rebooting is the ONLY way I can fix it for a while however, whenever I go to reboot when the wireless NIC is locked up, it hangs at "logging off" until I hard reset it, which I DO NOT LIKE TO DO! I have had hard drives critically fail after a hard reset/power down, so I try to avoid doing it lest I encounter a worst case scenario. I have been having this problem since Windows XP, and I thought my worries were over when I got Vista, because the problem has got to be Windows, because even after I bought completely new components for my computer (including 3 different Wireless NICs and 2 different routers) the problem still occurs. -- therock |
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You give NO hardware specs, so you are impossible to help.
You had this problem in XP as well. So???? You have given NO info!!!! "therock" wrote: Below is from a post here from May/07. I have the same thing. The only thing not mentioned is when I got to Task Manager to look it over and select the Networking tab it shows a blank and it's all over but the crying. I have to ctrl/alt/del again and end task the task manager and do a re-start to get going again. ================================= My problem has to do with my wireless networking connection suddenly and without reason losing connection to the internet while still being connected to the LAN, or at least SAYING it's connected to the LAN when in fact it has completely locked up. On XP this was resolved 60% of the time by "repairing" the connection. Other times that would cause the entire system to lock up, or fail to do anything so the only way to get my connection back was to reboot the computer. On Vista, you can't "repair" the same way you could in XP (Vista diagnoses the problem and comes up with 3 solutions that are not the problem and makes no attempt to repair). Manually disconnecting causes it to lock up. A few times I have fixed it by unplugging my adapter and then reconnecting it after a moment. I would try /release /renew but for some reason it keeps telling me the action can not be performed when there is no connection, even though it's connected with limited connectivity (in my experience this just means the DHCP didn't assign the IP address correctly). Rebooting is the ONLY way I can fix it for a while however, whenever I go to reboot when the wireless NIC is locked up, it hangs at "logging off" until I hard reset it, which I DO NOT LIKE TO DO! I have had hard drives critically fail after a hard reset/power down, so I try to avoid doing it lest I encounter a worst case scenario. I have been having this problem since Windows XP, and I thought my worries were over when I got Vista, because the problem has got to be Windows, because even after I bought completely new components for my computer (including 3 different Wireless NICs and 2 different routers) the problem still occurs. -- therock |