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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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After installing Windows Vista I get a single network adapter assigned two IP
addresses which causes a conflict everytime I start up. I disable and enable the adapter and the problem goes away. Then I can connect to the internet. How do I solve this so that I don't need this intermediate step. Thanks in advance, TG |
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The Network card is an identifiable chip unless it is integrated. Is it a
laptop or desktop? In the case of the later it is more likely to be a separate CPI card. You will have to reinstall the drivers, I guess. I not not know if a simple disabling the device will do it. If this is the case, you should try to upgrade the drivers. Perhaps there is a later version at the manufacturer's website. All that failed give them a call or hold a live concierge talk. Is it a new machine? Do you still have a warrantee? If it an old machine and it is a new Vista then consider going to Best Buy and purchasing a network card with all the drivers attached. What else? I have no idea. "Toronto Gal" Toronto wrote in message ... After installing Windows Vista I get a single network adapter assigned two IP addresses which causes a conflict everytime I start up. I disable and enable the adapter and the problem goes away. Then I can connect to the internet. How do I solve this so that I don't need this intermediate step. Thanks in advance, TG |
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I have tried installing all the device drivers I could find, and no help. It
is not a new machine, just an upgrade. This is the only problem I have. Enable and disable makes the problem go away, but it reoccurs on the next reboot. TG "alexB" wrote: The Network card is an identifiable chip unless it is integrated. Is it a laptop or desktop? In the case of the later it is more likely to be a separate CPI card. You will have to reinstall the drivers, I guess. I not not know if a simple disabling the device will do it. If this is the case, you should try to upgrade the drivers. Perhaps there is a later version at the manufacturer's website. All that failed give them a call or hold a live concierge talk. Is it a new machine? Do you still have a warrantee? If it an old machine and it is a new Vista then consider going to Best Buy and purchasing a network card with all the drivers attached. What else? I have no idea. "Toronto Gal" Toronto wrote in message ... After installing Windows Vista I get a single network adapter assigned two IP addresses which causes a conflict everytime I start up. I disable and enable the adapter and the problem goes away. Then I can connect to the internet. How do I solve this so that I don't need this intermediate step. Thanks in advance, TG |
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I wish I could help you but I have no idea. The only thing I suggest you
should call MS. If you dial their number which I believe is 1-800-MICROSOFT, double check on that, you will get a frightening message that you should pay so many US dollars per minute to get help. Ignore it and get around the message by choosing an option to talk to an operator. Ask them to direct you to a technician. I am an MSDN Pro subscriber which costs me exactly $900 a year but I get help and software from them worth roughly 2 orders of magnitude that much, they are so generous. But is is also my impression that when I call them with a problem and mention that I am a subscriber they essentially ignore it because I always call them with problems which are not related to MSDN at all. I can get all the help along the MSDN lines on their websites. I called them recently on an issue of a screwed up produce key for an OEM XP and it worked just fine, although I again brandished my MSDN credentials which they ignored. Before that there was another problem, hotmail related, which a guys fixed for me, I talked to him for almost 30 min, he was very generous. It was on Dec 31. It was not MSDN related at all. Go ahead, it is doable. "Toronto Gal" wrote in message ... I have tried installing all the device drivers I could find, and no help. It is not a new machine, just an upgrade. This is the only problem I have. Enable and disable makes the problem go away, but it reoccurs on the next reboot. TG "alexB" wrote: The Network card is an identifiable chip unless it is integrated. Is it a laptop or desktop? In the case of the later it is more likely to be a separate CPI card. You will have to reinstall the drivers, I guess. I not not know if a simple disabling the device will do it. If this is the case, you should try to upgrade the drivers. Perhaps there is a later version at the manufacturer's website. All that failed give them a call or hold a live concierge talk. Is it a new machine? Do you still have a warrantee? If it an old machine and it is a new Vista then consider going to Best Buy and purchasing a network card with all the drivers attached. What else? I have no idea. "Toronto Gal" Toronto wrote in message ... After installing Windows Vista I get a single network adapter assigned two IP addresses which causes a conflict everytime I start up. I disable and enable the adapter and the problem goes away. Then I can connect to the internet. How do I solve this so that I don't need this intermediate step. Thanks in advance, TG |
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please post the text output of ipconfig /all
http://digitalmediaphile.wordpress.c...t-text-output/ On Thu, 10 Jan 2008 18:23:33 -0800, Toronto Gal wrote: I have tried installing all the device drivers I could find, and no help. It is not a new machine, just an upgrade. This is the only problem I have. Enable and disable makes the problem go away, but it reoccurs on the next reboot. TG "alexB" wrote: The Network card is an identifiable chip unless it is integrated. Is it a laptop or desktop? In the case of the later it is more likely to be a separate CPI card. You will have to reinstall the drivers, I guess. I not not know if a simple disabling the device will do it. If this is the case, you should try to upgrade the drivers. Perhaps there is a later version at the manufacturer's website. All that failed give them a call or hold a live concierge talk. Is it a new machine? Do you still have a warrantee? If it an old machine and it is a new Vista then consider going to Best Buy and purchasing a network card with all the drivers attached. What else? I have no idea. "Toronto Gal" Toronto wrote in message ... After installing Windows Vista I get a single network adapter assigned two IP addresses which causes a conflict everytime I start up. I disable and enable the adapter and the problem goes away. Then I can connect to the internet. How do I solve this so that I don't need this intermediate step. Thanks in advance, TG -- Barb Bowman MS Windows-MVP http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ |
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