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-   -   Setting up Home Networking on Win XP turns on ICF - and stops the network working... (http://www.pcbanter.net/showthread.php?t=649984)

John Hyde August 24th 04 12:01 PM

Setting up Home Networking on Win XP turns on ICF - and stops the network working...
 
Hi. I've been running a home network for some time, using a router with a
hardware firewall and connect each of the machines to the Internet and to
each other through that. I use a Windows 2000 machine to store files and an
XP Home and an XP Pro machine, both set up using the XP Network Wizard, so I
can keep things in sync. I've had a few minor problems in that every once
in a while (I think after using a wireless Internet connection on the XP Pro
laptop) the other machines in the network would not be found and I'd have to
re-run the network setup wizard on the XP machines, but that always sorted
things out.



However, (possibly since running Windows Update), every time I try to set up
the home network, the Internet Connection Firewall turns itself on.
Presumably as a consequence of this none of the machines can see each other.
(I've run the Network Setup Wizard with the Network Connections screen
showing and it changes as the wizard runs.)



Does anyone have an idea why this has started happening and how to stop it?
I'm working from home and this is giving me major problems.



Some extra information that may or may not be of relevance:



The router is a D-Link Wireless Broadband router model DI-624. The laptop
(XP Pro) machine has a wireless LAN card that I use if I'm not in the same
room as the other PCs for Internet access, and this still works OK

If I try to look at the other PCs using My Network Places, both XP Machines
show the "PARKHEAD" workgroup (after several seconds), but clicking this to
expand it results after a long pause in the message "Parkhead is not
accessible. You may not have permission to use this network resource.
Contact the administrator of this server to find out if you have access
permissions". (My sign-on does have administrator privileges.) On the Win
2000 machine only that machine is shown as belonging to the Parkhead
workgroup.

I normally set the Ethernet Local Area Connection as the Internet Connection
rather than the wireless connection, but have tried specifying the wireless
connection, and that still sets the firewall on on the Ethernet LAN
connection. (The wireless connection is via a network bridge.)

The motherboard died on one PC a little while ago, so when I replaced it I
had to re-install windows and download 49 critical updates, so I have no way
of knowing if it was one of these that caused the problem.

The Bluetooth connection on my laptop (XP Pro) machine now comes up every
time saying "A network cable is unplugged", but I can still use it to
connect to my mobile phone...

I normally run Norton Internet Security 2004 on both XP machines, but have
tried this several times with both internet security and anti-virus
disabled, and it appears to make no difference.



I'd be very grateful for any assistance here. Thanks for taking the time to
read this.



John Hyde.



Steve Winograd [MVP] August 24th 04 07:32 PM

Setting up Home Networking on Win XP turns on ICF - and stops the network working...
 
In article ,
"John Hyde" wrote:
Hi. I've been running a home network for some time, using a router with a
hardware firewall and connect each of the machines to the Internet and to
each other through that. I use a Windows 2000 machine to store files and an
XP Home and an XP Pro machine, both set up using the XP Network Wizard, so I
can keep things in sync. I've had a few minor problems in that every once
in a while (I think after using a wireless Internet connection on the XP Pro
laptop) the other machines in the network would not be found and I'd have to
re-run the network setup wizard on the XP machines, but that always sorted
things out.

However, (possibly since running Windows Update), every time I try to set up
the home network, the Internet Connection Firewall turns itself on.
Presumably as a consequence of this none of the machines can see each other.
(I've run the Network Setup Wizard with the Network Connections screen
showing and it changes as the wizard runs.)

Does anyone have an idea why this has started happening and how to stop it?
I'm working from home and this is giving me major problems.

Some extra information that may or may not be of relevance:

The router is a D-Link Wireless Broadband router model DI-624. The laptop
(XP Pro) machine has a wireless LAN card that I use if I'm not in the same
room as the other PCs for Internet access, and this still works OK

If I try to look at the other PCs using My Network Places, both XP Machines
show the "PARKHEAD" workgroup (after several seconds), but clicking this to
expand it results after a long pause in the message "Parkhead is not
accessible. You may not have permission to use this network resource.
Contact the administrator of this server to find out if you have access
permissions". (My sign-on does have administrator privileges.) On the Win
2000 machine only that machine is shown as belonging to the Parkhead
workgroup.

I normally set the Ethernet Local Area Connection as the Internet Connection
rather than the wireless connection, but have tried specifying the wireless
connection, and that still sets the firewall on on the Ethernet LAN
connection. (The wireless connection is via a network bridge.)

The motherboard died on one PC a little while ago, so when I replaced it I
had to re-install windows and download 49 critical updates, so I have no way
of knowing if it was one of these that caused the problem.

The Bluetooth connection on my laptop (XP Pro) machine now comes up every
time saying "A network cable is unplugged", but I can still use it to
connect to my mobile phone...

I normally run Norton Internet Security 2004 on both XP machines, but have
tried this several times with both internet security and anti-virus
disabled, and it appears to make no difference.

I'd be very grateful for any assistance here. Thanks for taking the time to
read this.

John Hyde.


Stop running the Network Setup Wizard. You only need to do it once,
when you first set up the computer.

Open the Network Connections folder. If there's a Network Bridge,
right-click and delete it.

On each wired (LAN) and wireless network connection:

1. Right-click the connection.

2. Click Properties.

3. Click Advanced.

4. Un-check the boxes under "Internet Connection Firewall" and
"Internet Connection Sharing".
--
Best Wishes,
Steve Winograd, MS-MVP (Windows Networking)

Please post any reply as a follow-up message in the news group
for everyone to see. I'm sorry, but I don't answer questions
addressed directly to me in E-mail or news groups.

Microsoft Most Valuable Professional Program
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com


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