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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
The computer is: Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit
Several weeks ago I posted the thread "XP Wont boot (with HDD transplant)". After wasting several hours trying to follow the advice on here and on several websites, I finally decided it would not likely work to transplant the HDD, and I had already wasted enough time trying. I copied the entire HDD to a flash drive using Puppy Linux, and proceeded to reinstall Windows. I grabbed a pre-activated XP SP3 CD and installed XP from scratch. When I was done, I had a working "raw" copy of XP. However, I had no access to the computers built in WIFI, and the WIFI card was not even recognized. NOTE: On my old T43 computer, I installed XP with the same CD, and immediately had working WIFI. Of course Windows lead me to the HELP FILES, which told me to connect to the internet to download some drivers. (How the F**K am I supposed to connect ot the internet)...... (This is not the first time I ran into this, and it makes me wonder what kind of idiots at MS designed XP). Anyhow, I unplugged that HDD, and put back the HDD that came with this new computer, with a fresh copy of XP installed. I had planned to format that drive, because I dont trust an OS installed on a computer that I buy from a private party. Anyhow, that HDD with XP installed, does recognize the WIFI card..... -BUT- When I click on the WIFI icon, it will NOT give me a list of available WIFI servers. I did this at the place in town which gives me the best WIFI signal. Yet, I did not see that place or any other places on the list. I ran the REPAIR thingie on that's built in, and got an error message telling me it could not connect. I also got several times something telling me that a network cable is not plugged in. (There are no cables, the WIFI is built into the computer). So, I drove across town and went to the public library. I know they always have their WIFI working, even though it's slower than the restaurant I usually use. The same thing happened there. (No WIFI available). I was just about ready to go home and see if it's possible to swap the wifi card from my old (dead) T43 into this computer (I'm not sure if that is a plug in card, or what, where it is). That's when I clicked on some weblink in the computer, which opened Firefox, and I was actually connected to their WIFI and a webpage loaded. So, what I now have, is a working WIFI, but I dont know if it's connected, or what it's connected to, because the "List of available WIFI servers" is still blank and is telling me there are none available. If this is not confusing enough, when I rebooted the computer, a message popped up telling me (some number) of WIFI servers are available, yet the list still does not list them....... WTF????? How do I fix this? (Note: Device manager does not show any yellow question marks for devices and drivers, it shows everything is working). |
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptopwith XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
On Sat, 10 Sep 2016 09:28:18 +0100, "J. P. Gilliver (John)"
wrote: In message , writes: The computer is: Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit [] When I was done, I had a working "raw" copy of XP. However, I had no access to the computers built in WIFI, and the WIFI card was not even recognized. NOTE: On my old T43 computer, I installed XP with the same CD, and immediately had working WIFI. _Sounds_ like Lenovo changed source of wifi hardware during the T43 production run. Assuming all else is the same, i. e. you installed from the same CD onto a blank HD in both cases. (You refer to it as "a pre-activated XP SP3 CD" - is that a volume-licenced one you've somehow got hold of?) Something like that. Of course Windows lead me to the HELP FILES, which told me to connect to the internet to download some drivers. (How the F**K am I supposed to connect ot the internet)...... (This is not the first time I ran into this, and it makes me wonder what kind of idiots at MS designed XP). Like the famous BIOS message "keyboard error: press F1 to continue" (-: Yep !!! Anyhow, I unplugged that HDD, and put back the HDD that came with this new computer, with a fresh copy of XP installed. I had planned to format that drive, because I dont trust an OS installed on a computer that I buy from a private party. Don't trash what's on that drive for some while yet! Before I do, I have a program that will extract all the drivers. Then again, I may just leave it installed. The only problem is that it came with AVG anti virus. I hate that damn thing and cant see how to disable it. It keeps popping up annoying messages and its causing XP to take literally 3 to 4 minutes to boot up. Anyhow, that HDD with XP installed, does recognize the WIFI card..... -BUT- When I click on the WIFI icon, it will NOT give me a list of available WIFI servers. I did this at the place in town which gives me My first thought is that, yes, you've now got drivers for the wifi hardware, but it's turned off. Sometimes this is a switch (key) on the computer (sometimes by the keyboard, sometimes in an obscure position round the outside somewhere); sometimes it's a secondary function of one of the function keys (i. e. used with the Fn key, usually near the bottom left); look at the Fn keys for an aerial or radio wave symbol. If you're lucky, toggling it will make a relevant graphic pop up on screen showing it enabled/disabled. But ... The switch is supposed to be the FN and F5 keys. Nothing happens when I click them. available). I was just about ready to go home and see if it's possible to swap the wifi card from my old (dead) T43 into this computer (I'm not sure if that is a plug in card, or what, where it is). That's when I clicked on some weblink in the computer, which opened Firefox, and I was actually connected to their WIFI and a webpage loaded. ... that suggests it isn't what I thought, unless either (a) that page was loading from cache or local file rather than the internet, or (b) you'd turned wifi on by accident. No cache. I had just installed Firefox. It came with IE8 and Chrome installed. I copied the installer for FF from my desktop puter, via a flash drive, and installed it. I pretty much only use FF. I dislike Chrome. I'll use IE before Chrome. (I don't know the T43, but on a lot of laptops it _is_ a separate card - follow the wires from the aerial [usually just bare wires draped around the screen] to find it. There are probably YouTube dismantling guides - there are for a lot of machines. It's often a card about an inch by an inch and a half.) There is no aerial So, what I now have, is a working WIFI, but I dont know if it's connected, or what it's connected to, because the "List of available WIFI servers" is still blank and is telling me there are none available. If this is not confusing enough, when I rebooted the computer, a message popped up telling me (some number) of WIFI servers are available, yet the list still does not list them....... WTF????? How do I fix this? (Note: Device manager does not show any yellow question marks for devices and drivers, it shows everything is working). The next time I tried to connect, it refused to connect at all. Today I tried again, after reinstalling the driver. Same thing, it refused to connect. After screwing around with settings, (many which I have no clue what I'm doing), it did connect. I watched several youtube videos, and went to ebay, and some other webpages. Then I rebooted, and once again, I can not connect at all. This is the log file which I was able to link to from IE. (When I can not connect) I am at a restaurant sitting about 12 feet from their WIFI server. (I always got an excellent WIFI connection at this restaurant on my old -now dead- computer) --------- Last diagnostic run time: 09/12/16 21:55:26 Wireless Diagnostic Wireless - Service disabled Wireless - User SSID action User input required: Specify network name or SSID Wireless - First time setup info The Wireless Network name (SSID) to which the user would like to connect = Hardees. Wireless - Radio off Wireless - Out of range Wireless - Hardware issue Wireless - Novice user action Manual repair: Add wireless network to the preferred list info Redirecting user to support call WinSock Diagnostic WinSock status info IrDA protocol is not found in Winsock catalog. info All base service provider entries are present in the Winsock catalog. info The Winsock Service provider chains are valid. info Provider entry MSAFD Tcpip [TCP/IP] passed the loopback communication test. info Provider entry MSAFD Tcpip [UDP/IP] passed the loopback communication test. info Provider entry RSVP UDP Service Provider passed the loopback communication test. info Provider entry RSVP TCP Service Provider passed the loopback communication test. info Provider entry MSAFD Tcpip [TCP/IPv6] passed the loopback communication test. info Provider entry MSAFD Tcpip [UDP/IPv6] passed the loopback communication test. info Connectivity is valid for all Winsock service providers. Network Adapter Diagnostic Network location detection info Using home Internet connection Network adapter identification info Network connection: Name=Wireless Network Connection, Device=11a/b/g Wireless LAN Mini PCI Adapter II, MediaType=LAN, SubMediaType=WIRELESS info Network connection: Name=Local Area Connection, Device=Intel(R) PRO/1000 MT Mobile Connection, MediaType=LAN, SubMediaType=LAN info Both Ethernet and Wireless connections available, prompting user for selection action User input required: Select network connection info Wireless connection selected Network adapter status info Network connection status: Connected HTTP, HTTPS, FTP Diagnostic HTTP, HTTPS, FTP connectivity warn HTTP: Error 12007 connecting to www.microsoft.com: The server name or address could not be resolved warn HTTPS: Error 12007 connecting to www.microsoft.com: The server name or address could not be resolved warn FTP (Passive): Error 12007 connecting to ftp.microsoft.com: The server name or address could not be resolved warn HTTP: Error 12007 connecting to www.hotmail.com: The server name or address could not be resolved warn HTTPS: Error 12007 connecting to www.passport.net: The server name or address could not be resolved warn FTP (Active): Error 12007 connecting to ftp.microsoft.com: The server name or address could not be resolved error Could not make an HTTP connection. error Could not make an HTTPS connection. error Could not make an FTP connection. |
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptopwith XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
wrote:
The server name or address could not be resolved error Could not make an HTTP connection. error Could not make an HTTPS connection. error Could not make an FTP connection. DNS problem ? You could try setting the DNS address to use Google DNS. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Public_DNS "Google Public DNS operates recursive name servers for public use at the following IP addresses: 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 for IPv4 service --- Use these 2001:4860:4860::8888 and 2001:4860:4860::8844 for IPv6 access. The addresses are mapped to the nearest operational server by anycast routing. " The dialog looks like this. You can (eventually) leave the "Obtain An IP Address" at Automatic, after setting the lower section to use 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4. https://p6.zdusercontent.com/attachm...dj9d0jyv3fcxkx Then open a Command Prompt and do some nslookup www.sun.com style of testing. Or you could run your diagnostic again if you want. Paul |
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
On Tue, 13 Sep 2016 11:11:44 -0400, Paul wrote:
wrote: The server name or address could not be resolved error Could not make an HTTP connection. error Could not make an HTTPS connection. error Could not make an FTP connection. DNS problem ? You could try setting the DNS address to use Google DNS. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Public_DNS "Google Public DNS operates recursive name servers for public use at the following IP addresses: 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 for IPv4 service --- Use these 2001:4860:4860::8888 and 2001:4860:4860::8844 for IPv6 access. The addresses are mapped to the nearest operational server by anycast routing. " The dialog looks like this. You can (eventually) leave the "Obtain An IP Address" at Automatic, after setting the lower section to use 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4. https://p6.zdusercontent.com/attachm...dj9d0jyv3fcxkx Then open a Command Prompt and do some nslookup www.sun.com style of testing. Or you could run your diagnostic again if you want. Paul Ok, but where / how do I set this??? Thanks |
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptopwith XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
wrote:
On Tue, 13 Sep 2016 11:11:44 -0400, Paul wrote: wrote: The server name or address could not be resolved error Could not make an HTTP connection. error Could not make an HTTPS connection. error Could not make an FTP connection. DNS problem ? You could try setting the DNS address to use Google DNS. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Public_DNS "Google Public DNS operates recursive name servers for public use at the following IP addresses: 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 for IPv4 service --- Use these 2001:4860:4860::8888 and 2001:4860:4860::8844 for IPv6 access. The addresses are mapped to the nearest operational server by anycast routing. " The dialog looks like this. You can (eventually) leave the "Obtain An IP Address" at Automatic, after setting the lower section to use 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4. https://p6.zdusercontent.com/attachm...dj9d0jyv3fcxkx Then open a Command Prompt and do some nslookup www.sun.com style of testing. Or you could run your diagnostic again if you want. Paul Ok, but where / how do I set this??? Thanks In WinXP: Control Panels : Network Connections Right-click the Wifi one, do "Properties". Scroll to the bottom one, "Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)" Do Properties on that entry. The dialog that results should have: Obtain an IP address automatically Obtain DNS server address automatically You can set the lower (DNS) one to manual operation and enter the Google 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 in the lines down there. The reason there are two of them, is if one fails or is unreachable (it is rebooting), the other can be used by your OS. Paul |
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
On Tue, 13 Sep 2016 17:56:10 -0400, Paul wrote:
wrote: On Tue, 13 Sep 2016 11:11:44 -0400, Paul wrote: wrote: The server name or address could not be resolved error Could not make an HTTP connection. error Could not make an HTTPS connection. error Could not make an FTP connection. DNS problem ? You could try setting the DNS address to use Google DNS. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Public_DNS "Google Public DNS operates recursive name servers for public use at the following IP addresses: 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 for IPv4 service --- Use these 2001:4860:4860::8888 and 2001:4860:4860::8844 for IPv6 access. The addresses are mapped to the nearest operational server by anycast routing. " The dialog looks like this. You can (eventually) leave the "Obtain An IP Address" at Automatic, after setting the lower section to use 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4. https://p6.zdusercontent.com/attachm...dj9d0jyv3fcxkx Then open a Command Prompt and do some nslookup www.sun.com style of testing. Or you could run your diagnostic again if you want. Paul Ok, but where / how do I set this??? Thanks In WinXP: Control Panels : Network Connections Right-click the Wifi one, do "Properties". Scroll to the bottom one, "Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)" Do Properties on that entry. The dialog that results should have: Obtain an IP address automatically Obtain DNS server address automatically You can set the lower (DNS) one to manual operation and enter the Google 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 in the lines down there. The reason there are two of them, is if one fails or is unreachable (it is rebooting), the other can be used by your OS. Paul Ok, thanks. I did this, but I wont know if it works till I get somewhere that has WIFI again. In Device Manager, Under Network Adaptors There is the WIFI card called 11a/b/g Wireless LAN Mini PCI Adaptor II There is also a thing called Intel(R) PRO/1000 MT Mobile Connection. What the heck is that second one for (Intel.....) ALSO There is a thing called Infrared Devices IBM Thinkpad Fast Infrared Port. What does that do? This T43 has this stuff I dont recall my old T43 having. It also has a fingerprint reader, which is something I dont see a need for, since no one uses my computers except me. I'd disable that is I knew how, so it dont keep asking me to set it up. |
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
On Tue, 13 Sep 2016 23:20:36 +0100, "J. P. Gilliver (John)"
wrote: In message , writes: On Sat, 10 Sep 2016 09:28:18 +0100, "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: [] Don't trash what's on that drive for some while yet! Before I do, I have a program that will extract all the drivers. Then There's more there than just drivers! I'd at least image it. Even if I dont reinstall it, I'd like to image it, but what can I use that FREE? Not Macrium, I never could figure that thing out. I used to use Norton Ghost for windows3.x or was it for Win95/98. I probably still have that program, but I dont think it works for XP. My other alternative is to boot from Puppy Linux and just copy the whole HDD to a flash drive (which is how I normally do backups of the OS on all computers). My other data I just copy directly to external drives. again, I may just leave it installed. The only problem is that it came with AVG anti virus. I hate that damn thing and cant see how to disable it. It keeps popping up annoying messages and its causing XP to take literally 3 to 4 minutes to boot up. (I think mine does anyway!) Revo _might_ help, but also I _think_ that AVG might be one of the companies that actually offer a removal tool of their own. Google "AVG removal tool", and other similar phrases. (Make sure you trust any source though: ideally direct from AVG. Maybe someone here can give a pointer - possibly via Wayback.) [] I'll have to look for something to remove it. (I don't know the T43, but on a lot of laptops it _is_ a separate card - follow the wires from the aerial [usually just bare wires draped around the screen] to find it. There are probably YouTube dismantling guides - there are for a lot of machines. It's often a card about an inch by an inch and a half.) There is no aerial There is: it won't work without one! However, it's often just some wires draped around under the plastic - often around the screen. These wires - which _are_ the aerial - are often connected to the wifi card by little gold-plated plugs/sockets. [] The WIFI cards must be on the bottom. I have the keyboard removed from my dead T43 and I dont see anything under there that appears to be a card, but I am not sure what I am looking for either. This is the log file which I was able to link to from IE. [] info IrDA protocol is not found in Winsock catalog. I _think_ that's to do with infrared communications. ~[] info Using home Internet connection Network adapter identification info Network connection: Name=Wireless Network Connection, Device=11a/b/g Wireless LAN Mini PCI Adapter II, MediaType=LAN, SubMediaType=WIRELESS So it found it, as that. [] |
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptopwith XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
The wifi card is in the mini pci slot under the left wrist rest as shown on
pages 98-99 of the manual. http://download.lenovo.com/ibmdl/pub...df/39t6193.pdf 4.366 kb. In Device Manager, Under Network Adaptors There is the WIFI card called 11a/b/g Wireless LAN Mini PCI Adaptor II That's the wifi card. There is also a thing called Intel(R) PRO/1000 MT Mobile Connection. What the heck is that second one for (Intel.....) That's the cat5 ethernet card. There is a thing called Infrared Devices IBM Thinkpad Fast Infrared Port. Old technology. It was supposed to have been used for printers and other peripherals. I only know of one person that actually used it. There was a software hack for it so that you could use it to remote control an IR TV. This T43 has this stuff I dont recall my old T43 having. It also has a fingerprint reader, which is something I dont see a need for, since no one uses my computers except me. I'd disable that is I knew how, so it dont keep asking me to set it up. Another old technology. Disable it in device manager. Your comp should also have Bluetooth. I've never found a _practical_ use for that either and disabled it in device manager. Also, these machines are prone to video cable breaking. It will look like it's trying to boot but nothing shows on the screen. Fortunately cables are available on ebay for $15. |
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptopwith XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
wrote:
On Tue, 13 Sep 2016 23:20:36 +0100, "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: In message , writes: On Sat, 10 Sep 2016 09:28:18 +0100, "J. P. Gilliver (John)" wrote: [] Don't trash what's on that drive for some while yet! Before I do, I have a program that will extract all the drivers. Then There's more there than just drivers! I'd at least image it. Even if I dont reinstall it, I'd like to image it, but what can I use that FREE? Not Macrium, I never could figure that thing out. These are film strips I made for using Macrium. https://s22.postimg.org/gxz3fdbch/Macrium6_Backup.gif https://s9.postimg.org/6mko7k7m5/Macrium_Restore_CD.gif That site no longer accepts images that big, so I can't make any more film strips. In Firefox, click to zoom in or zoom out. I didn't make a film strip for installing the software. The stub downloader is the green button on the upper right. http://www.macrium.com/reflectfree.aspx The main software is maybe 40MB, while the WinPE package for making a boot CD can be several hundred megabytes. This is not a package to download over a dialup modem. There will be the two download files - Macrium will process the WinPE file before storing it for later. The number of bytes downloaded won't be exactly the same as the file stored on disk (because of compression or sometbing). It's possible the WinPE comes from Microsoft, and they process it for their own purposes. When you start the program for the first time, it will offer to make an emergency boot CD, and that's handy for restoring to a brand new (empty) internal hard drive. I like to have each machine make its own emergency CD, then keep it in the stack of DVDs next to the computer. You can do both backup and restore with the CD, so the C: OS partition doesn't have to be functional to use it. The CD is quite capable of getting the job done. Paul |
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
On Wed, 14 Sep 2016 01:20:52 -0400, Paul wrote:
These are film strips I made for using Macrium. https://s22.postimg.org/gxz3fdbch/Macrium6_Backup.gif https://s9.postimg.org/6mko7k7m5/Macrium_Restore_CD.gif Nice job on these!!!! |
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My WIFI does not show any available servers (Lenovo T43 Laptop with XP Pro SP3, 32bit)
On Tue, 13 Sep 2016 17:56:10 -0400, Paul wrote:
wrote: On Tue, 13 Sep 2016 11:11:44 -0400, Paul wrote: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Public_DNS "Google Public DNS operates recursive name servers for public use at the following IP addresses: 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 for IPv4 service --- Use these 2001:4860:4860::8888 and 2001:4860:4860::8844 for IPv6 access. The addresses are mapped to the nearest operational server by anycast routing. " The dialog looks like this. You can (eventually) leave the "Obtain An IP Address" at Automatic, after setting the lower section to use 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4. https://p6.zdusercontent.com/attachm...dj9d0jyv3fcxkx Then open a Command Prompt and do some nslookup www.sun.com style of testing. Or you could run your diagnostic again if you want. Paul Ok, but where / how do I set this??? Thanks In WinXP: Control Panels : Network Connections Right-click the Wifi one, do "Properties". Scroll to the bottom one, "Internet Protocol (TCP/IP)" Do Properties on that entry. The dialog that results should have: Obtain an IP address automatically Obtain DNS server address automatically You can set the lower (DNS) one to manual operation and enter the Google 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 in the lines down there. The reason there are two of them, is if one fails or is unreachable (it is rebooting), the other can be used by your OS. Paul Ok, I did all of this. I went to a WIFI place and now it shows a list of all the area servers. I connected to the nearest WIFI, said I am connected, and said my connection is VERY GOOD (4 bars). Although I am connected, I can not connect to any websites. I tried Firefox, IE, and Chrome. None of them will connect to the internet. Here is the log Last diagnostic run time: 09/14/16 03:42:28 Gateway Diagnostic Gateway info The following proxy configuration is being used by IE: Automatically Detect Settingsisabled Automatic Configuration Script: Proxy Server: Proxy Bypass list: info This computer has the following default gateway entry(ies): 192.168.150.254 info This computer has the following IP address(es): 192.168.150.100 info The default gateway is in the same subnet as this computer info The default gateway entry is a valid unicast address info The default gateway address was resolved via ARP in 1 try(ies) info The default gateway was reached via ICMP Ping in 1 try(ies) warn Hostname www.microsoft.com could not be resolved (Error code 0x2afc). Could be either gateway or DNS issue action Automated repair: Renew IP address action Releasing the current IP address... action Successfully released the current IP address action Renewing the IP address... action Successfully renewed the current IP address info This computer has the following default gateway entry(ies): 192.168.150.254 info This computer has the following IP address(es): 192.168.150.100 info The default gateway is in the same subnet as this computer info The default gateway entry is a valid unicast address info The default gateway address was resolved via ARP in 1 try(ies) info The default gateway was reached via ICMP Ping in 1 try(ies) warn Hostname www.microsoft.com could not be resolved (Error code 0x2afc). Could be either gateway or DNS issue action Automated repair: Reset network connection action Disabling the network adapter action Enabling the network adapter info Network adapter successfully enabled info This computer has the following default gateway entry(ies): 0.0.0.0 warn There is no default gateway entry action Manual repair: Reboot modem warn The repair attempt failed info Redirecting user to support call IP Layer Diagnostic Corrupted IP routing table info The default route is valid info The loopback route is valid info The local host route is valid info The local subnet route is valid Invalid ARP cache entries action The ARP cache has been flushed IP Configuration Diagnostic Invalid IP address info Valid IP address detected: 192.168.150.100 Wireless Diagnostic Wireless - Service disabled Wireless - User SSID action User input required: Specify network name or SSID Wireless - First time setup info The Wireless Network name (SSID) to which the user would like to connect = Hardees. Wireless - Radio off info Valid IP address detected: 192.168.150.100 Wireless - Out of range Wireless - Hardware issue Wireless - Novice user Wireless - Ad-hoc network Wireless - Less preferred Wireless - 802.1x enabled Wireless - Configuration mismatch Wireless - Low SNR WinSock Diagnostic WinSock status info IrDA protocol is not found in Winsock catalog. info All base service provider entries are present in the Winsock catalog. info The Winsock Service provider chains are valid. info Provider entry MSAFD Tcpip [TCP/IP] passed the loopback communication test. info Provider entry MSAFD Tcpip [UDP/IP] passed the loopback communication test. info Provider entry RSVP UDP Service Provider passed the loopback communication test. info Provider entry RSVP TCP Service Provider passed the loopback communication test. info Provider entry MSAFD Tcpip [TCP/IPv6] passed the loopback communication test. info Provider entry MSAFD Tcpip [UDP/IPv6] passed the loopback communication test. info Connectivity is valid for all Winsock service providers. Network Adapter Diagnostic Network location detection info Using home Internet connection Network adapter identification info Network connection: Name=Wireless Network Connection, Device=11a/b/g Wireless LAN Mini PCI Adapter II, MediaType=LAN, SubMediaType=WIRELESS info Network connection: Name=Local Area Connection, Device=Intel(R) PRO/1000 MT Mobile Connection, MediaType=LAN, SubMediaType=LAN info Both Ethernet and Wireless connections available, prompting user for selection action User input required: Select network connection info Wireless connection selected Network adapter status info Network connection status: Connected HTTP, HTTPS, FTP Diagnostic HTTP, HTTPS, FTP connectivity warn HTTP: Error 12007 connecting to www.microsoft.com: The server name or address could not be resolved warn FTP (Passive): Error 12007 connecting to ftp.microsoft.com: The server name or address could not be resolved warn HTTPS: Error 12007 connecting to www.microsoft.com: The server name or address could not be resolved error Could not make an HTTP connection. error Could not make an HTTPS connection. error Could not make an FTP connection. |
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