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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Everytime I reboot the laptop I loose the ability to connect to the internet although the laptop confirms a connection to the wireless network router. As soons as I click "Diagnose this connection" and choose "Automatically get new IP Settings for the network adapter" I have internet connectivity restored. The laptop is an HP dv6755ca, less then one week old, and has been checked to be sure all drivers and updates have been installed. I have run anti-virus and checked for malware/spyware. The network setup is 1. PC connected via ethernet, 1. wireless laptop and 1. smc8014w-g wireless gateway. Although the setup was walked through with me by the technician (over the phone) I'm not yet ruling out a faulty set-up in the 192.168.0.1 site [except that I have had no issues with the wired connection]. Any ideas as to how to get this setup so that I don't have to diagnose the laptop's internet connection everytime I turn it on? | Guest
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| | #2 (permalink) | |
| You could try right-clicking on your laptop's Network connection, left-click Properties, disable TCP/IPv6, and see if tha makes a difference. "WilliamW" wrote: Quote:
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| | #3 (permalink) | |
| right click on the network connection>left click properties> left click Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4)> and make sure that it is set to "Obtain an IP address automatically". When you specify an IP address you don't get internet. With DHCP enabled you get an IP address automatically that will let you access the internet. Hope this helped, guitardude "WilliamW" <WilliamW@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:B32F14E5-DF42-4946-A1EF-585FE0BE08E7@microsoft.com... Quote:
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| | #4 (permalink) | |
| When I click on the Red X (before trying to the other fix) I get the Windows Network Diagnostics window saying "There may be a problem with your Domain Name Server (DNS) configuration....Windows found a problem that cannot be repaired automatically". Not sure if this will narrow down any help or if this is a seperate issue. "WilliamW" wrote: Quote:
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| | #5 (permalink) | |
| orry, I forgot to mention that neither of the above 2 suggestions worked. Thanks though. "WilliamW" wrote: Quote:
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| | #6 (permalink) | |
| go to the properties dialogue again and select the TCP/IPv4 properties. Set the DNS to use 208.67.222.222 and 208.67.220.220 these DNS servers are provided by OpenDNS. A lot of times they are faster than your ISP's and offer other great features too. go to their website to learn more. www.opendns.com guitardude "WilliamW" <WilliamW@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:B32F14E5-DF42-4946-A1EF-585FE0BE08E7@microsoft.com... Quote:
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| | #7 (permalink) | |
| I have located what changes everytime the computer reboots, but I don't know how to change the default setting. When the connection is working the IPv4 address is set to 192.168.0.68, but when I reboot the setting always starts 169.254.176.138 How do I set this to start properly? "WilliamW" wrote: Quote:
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| | #8 (permalink) | |
| Go to the 192.168.0.1 configuration page you mentioned in your first post. either in DHCP settings or General Setting (or something like that) you will probably be able to specify what pool if assigns IP addresses from. If you find anything about the "lease time" for each IP address you might want to set it to "forever". I am going off of the way my routers menus are so yours will probably be a bit different. If you don't have any luck here you might try specifying the IP address that works in the IPv4 properties we have talked about instead of using the "automatically get IP address". As I said earlier, my understanding of specifying IP addresses is that it works only for local purposes. But you might want to give it a shot at putting in 192.168.0.68 to be the IP address. go to the IPv4 properties, select "Use the following IP address:" and for IP address put 192.168.0.68 then press tab to go to the Subnet mask which should automatically fill in to 255.255.255.0, then default gateway should be 192.168.0.1 If this still does not give you internet, then disable DHCP on your wireless gateway and see if any thing changes. I hope this didn't sound too much like rambling ![]() guitardude "WilliamW" <WilliamW@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:B32F14E5-DF42-4946-A1EF-585FE0BE08E7@microsoft.com... Quote:
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| | #9 (permalink) | ||
| Well I tried this: TCP/IP stack repair options for use with Windows Vista. Start, Programs\Accessories and right click on Command Prompt, select "Run as Administrator" to open a command prompt. Reset WINSOCK entries to installation defaults: netsh winsock reset catalog Reset IPv4 TCP/IP stack to installation defaults. netsh int ipv4 reset reset.log Reset IPv6 TCP/IP stack to installation defaults. netsh int ipv6 reset reset.log Reboot the machine. Ddn't work. Everytime I reboot and run "ipconfig /all" I notice the same IPv4 address coming up 169.254.x.x(preferred). I don't know why the wireless connection keeps getting that address. I'm sure that if it didn't all would be fine. The workaround you gave me is the only one that worked. A static IP address had to be used. However, I haven't gone back to work yet to see if the laptop will still connect at work using the 192.168 static address. There were never any problems connecting at work, just from home. BTW if it matters work uses WEP not WPA. Sad but true. I will let you know how it goes once I've been to work. "guitardude" wrote: Quote:
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| | #10 (permalink) | |||
| in the IPv4 properties you can set up an "Alternate Configuration". I have never used it but you might try it out. sorry I don't know any more, guitardude "WilliamW" <WilliamW@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:EA02F63D-194B-43D1-B975-549D330DE149@microsoft.com... Quote:
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