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| Wireless networking help I'm about to chuck my new $2K laptop with Vista Ultimate out of the window due to my frustration with wireless networking on the thing. Lenovo T500 Thinkpad Intel Core 2 Due Centrino with something called VPro Intel Wireless AGN 5300 wireless card Lenovo Access Connections (something that's supposed to manage and configure for various networks one might connect to). Firewall is Windows LIve OneCare firewall. My Router is a Netgear supplied by Time Warner Cable. I have two other computers running Windows XP that connet flawlessly and seamlessly to the wireless network. On the new laptop the wireless intermittently goes into something that Windows Networking reports as "Local Access Only" as opposed to "Local and Internet Access" when the computer is connected to the network. This is what the little networking icon in the notification section of the taskbar reports. I've managed to get it to reconnect by a process of try-this-and-see doiing one or more of the following. I have not yet identified a consistent sequence of activities that restore access. - powering off the wireless radio using the Access Connections icon in the notifications section, - disconnecting and reconnecting to the network from the networking icon in the notifications section of the taskbar - adjusting the settings of the firewall from "public place" to "Home/ Work". Not sure why this doesn't remain as specified. - uninstalling the entire wireless network defiinition and reinstalling it. Sometimes one of the above actions seem to precipitate changes in the other areas and I"ve not yet manages to understand cause-and-effect in this area. For instance, sometimes disconnecting from the wireless network will turn off the wireless radio. Any help/advice will be appreciated. Thanks. |
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| Re: Wireless networking help Turn off or remove the Windows Live OneCare firewall, use the one natively included in Vista. -- Best of Luck, Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP [url]http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/[/url] Windows help - [url]www.rickrogers.org[/url] My thoughts [url]http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com[/url] "MikeB" <MPBrede******.com> wrote in message news:1b74e233-f1dd-4aa9-be89-4d2c5de1f964@l38g2000vba.googlegroups.com...[color=blue] > I'm about to chuck my new $2K laptop with Vista Ultimate out of the > window due to my frustration with wireless networking on the thing. > > Lenovo T500 Thinkpad > Intel Core 2 Due Centrino with something called VPro > Intel Wireless AGN 5300 wireless card > Lenovo Access Connections (something that's supposed to manage and > configure for various networks one might connect to). > Firewall is Windows LIve OneCare firewall. > > My Router is a Netgear supplied by Time Warner Cable. I have two other > computers running Windows XP that connet flawlessly and seamlessly to > the wireless network. > > On the new laptop the wireless intermittently goes into something that > Windows Networking reports as "Local Access Only" as opposed to "Local > and Internet Access" when the computer is connected to the network. > This is what the little networking icon in the notification section of > the taskbar reports. > > I've managed to get it to reconnect by a process of try-this-and-see > doiing one or more of the following. I have not yet identified a > consistent sequence of activities that restore access. > > - powering off the wireless radio using the Access Connections icon > in the notifications section, > > - disconnecting and reconnecting to the network from the networking > icon in the notifications section of the taskbar > > - adjusting the settings of the firewall from "public place" to "Home/ > Work". Not sure why this doesn't remain as specified. > > - uninstalling the entire wireless network defiinition and > reinstalling it. > > Sometimes one of the above actions seem to precipitate changes in the > other areas and I"ve not yet manages to understand cause-and-effect in > this area. For instance, sometimes disconnecting from the wireless > network will turn off the wireless radio. > > Any help/advice will be appreciated. > > Thanks.[/color] |
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| Re: Wireless networking help "MikeB" <MPBrede******.com> wrote in message news:1b74e233-f1dd-4aa9-be89-4d2c5de1f964@l38g2000vba.googlegroups.com...[color=blue] > I'm about to chuck my new $2K laptop with Vista Ultimate out of the > window due to my frustration with wireless networking on the thing. > > Lenovo T500 Thinkpad > Intel Core 2 Due Centrino with something called VPro > Intel Wireless AGN 5300 wireless card > Lenovo Access Connections (something that's supposed to manage and > configure for various networks one might connect to). > Firewall is Windows LIve OneCare firewall. > > My Router is a Netgear supplied by Time Warner Cable. I have two other > computers running Windows XP that connet flawlessly and seamlessly to > the wireless network. > > On the new laptop the wireless intermittently goes into something that > Windows Networking reports as "Local Access Only" as opposed to "Local > and Internet Access" when the computer is connected to the network. > This is what the little networking icon in the notification section of > the taskbar reports. > > I've managed to get it to reconnect by a process of try-this-and-see > doiing one or more of the following. I have not yet identified a > consistent sequence of activities that restore access. > > - powering off the wireless radio using the Access Connections icon > in the notifications section, > > - disconnecting and reconnecting to the network from the networking > icon in the notifications section of the taskbar > > - adjusting the settings of the firewall from "public place" to "Home/ > Work". Not sure why this doesn't remain as specified. > > - uninstalling the entire wireless network defiinition and > reinstalling it. > > Sometimes one of the above actions seem to precipitate changes in the > other areas and I"ve not yet manages to understand cause-and-effect in > this area. For instance, sometimes disconnecting from the wireless > network will turn off the wireless radio. > > Any help/advice will be appreciated. > > Thanks.[/color] After about three agonizing months of dealing with Lenovo tech support, including two in-home service calls which yielded zero help and cost me hours of additional wasted time, and stubborn refusal on my part to get off the phone until tech support put a manager on the phone, I managed to get Lenovo to replace my T61 Thinkpad. The replacement Thinkpad was equally problematic and after painful escalation of my myriad of issues, to include the wireless networking issue you describe, I managed to get Lenovo to take the second Thinkpad back and refund me my money. I won't bore you with the details of the second phase of my war with Lenovo to get them to refund me a 15% restocking fee they withheld from the refund. I tried everything you mentioned to get the Vista machine to sustain a robust connection. My Windows XP desktop connected to my router flawlessly, every time. the Lenovo Vista Thinkpad connected sporadically and often lost the connection or would connect "local only". Have you tried uninstalling the Lenovo Access Connections. I seem to recall that it was a redundant program. Vista pretty much can do everything that program does. |
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| Re: Wireless networking help I'm running Vista Ultimate on an HP 6730s notebook (Intel PRO/Wireless 3945ABGN) and connecting to my desktop (Windows XP Pro) and Internet via a Linksys WRT54G wireless router. The desktop is hardwired to the router and the notebook connects wirelessly to the router. I'm running Windows Firewall on both machines. Everything runs fine. Tyro "MikeB" <MPBrede******.com> wrote in message news:1b74e233-f1dd-4aa9-be89-4d2c5de1f964@l38g2000vba.googlegroups.com...[color=blue] > I'm about to chuck my new $2K laptop with Vista Ultimate out of the > window due to my frustration with wireless networking on the thing. > > Lenovo T500 Thinkpad > Intel Core 2 Due Centrino with something called VPro > Intel Wireless AGN 5300 wireless card > Lenovo Access Connections (something that's supposed to manage and > configure for various networks one might connect to). > Firewall is Windows LIve OneCare firewall. > > My Router is a Netgear supplied by Time Warner Cable. I have two other > computers running Windows XP that connet flawlessly and seamlessly to > the wireless network. > > On the new laptop the wireless intermittently goes into something that > Windows Networking reports as "Local Access Only" as opposed to "Local > and Internet Access" when the computer is connected to the network. > This is what the little networking icon in the notification section of > the taskbar reports. > > I've managed to get it to reconnect by a process of try-this-and-see > doiing one or more of the following. I have not yet identified a > consistent sequence of activities that restore access. > > - powering off the wireless radio using the Access Connections icon > in the notifications section, > > - disconnecting and reconnecting to the network from the networking > icon in the notifications section of the taskbar > > - adjusting the settings of the firewall from "public place" to "Home/ > Work". Not sure why this doesn't remain as specified. > > - uninstalling the entire wireless network defiinition and > reinstalling it. > > Sometimes one of the above actions seem to precipitate changes in the > other areas and I"ve not yet manages to understand cause-and-effect in > this area. For instance, sometimes disconnecting from the wireless > network will turn off the wireless radio. > > Any help/advice will be appreciated. > > Thanks.[/color] |
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| Re: Wireless networking help On Dec 28, 10:07*am, "VistaUser" <w...********.com> wrote: [color=blue] > > Have you tried uninstalling the Lenovo Access Connections. *I seem to recall > that it was a redundant program. *Vista pretty much can do everything that > program does[/color] I considered this, since I uninstalled it on my previous laptop. I agree that it is pretty much redundant. However, on this laptop with built-in wireless, that seems to be the only place I can find that will turn the wireless radio on or off. Since it seems to turn off randomly, I'm leery of uninstalling it and then getting stuck with the wireless radio in "off". |
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| Re: Wireless networking help Hi-- On most laptops, notebooks, and netbooks, there is an "F" button where you can toggle wireless off and on by holding down the Fn and its key (it usually has a wireless antenna logo. Often it has 4 settings, Bluetooth On, Bluetooth off, Network Connection and Bluetooth On, Net Connection and Bluetooth Off. Check and make sure it's set to have wireless on. Although this is not mentioned enough, any router's 802.11 stability can be spooked by anything that can emit EMR (EM radiation) that interferes with your wireless frequency. Make sure your router is a sufficient distance from any box in your network that has two moving parts that can spook it--a fan and a rotating hard drive, any monitors which can emit EMR, and entities outside an office where construction is going on can also enter into the equation. The causes outside can even include pine trees because the moisture in the needles emits a frequency that interferes with many routers. Put the router far enough away from anything moving inside a box and from a monitor so it is stable. This can be remedied if necessary by getting a 3-4 meter USB connection(s) for the router. This instability can be corrected sometimes by just unplugging the router and replugging it in but router placement is important. Best of luck, CH "MikeB" <MPBrede******.com> wrote in message news:1b74e233-f1dd-4aa9-be89-4d2c5de1f964@l38g2000vba.googlegroups.com...[color=blue] > I'm about to chuck my new $2K laptop with Vista Ultimate out of the > window due to my frustration with wireless networking on the thing. > > Lenovo T500 Thinkpad > Intel Core 2 Due Centrino with something called VPro > Intel Wireless AGN 5300 wireless card > Lenovo Access Connections (something that's supposed to manage and > configure for various networks one might connect to). > Firewall is Windows LIve OneCare firewall. > > My Router is a Netgear supplied by Time Warner Cable. I have two other > computers running Windows XP that connet flawlessly and seamlessly to > the wireless network. > > On the new laptop the wireless intermittently goes into something that > Windows Networking reports as "Local Access Only" as opposed to "Local > and Internet Access" when the computer is connected to the network. > This is what the little networking icon in the notification section of > the taskbar reports. > > I've managed to get it to reconnect by a process of try-this-and-see > doiing one or more of the following. I have not yet identified a > consistent sequence of activities that restore access. > > - powering off the wireless radio using the Access Connections icon > in the notifications section, > > - disconnecting and reconnecting to the network from the networking > icon in the notifications section of the taskbar > > - adjusting the settings of the firewall from "public place" to "Home/ > Work". Not sure why this doesn't remain as specified. > > - uninstalling the entire wireless network defiinition and > reinstalling it. > > Sometimes one of the above actions seem to precipitate changes in the > other areas and I"ve not yet manages to understand cause-and-effect in > this area. For instance, sometimes disconnecting from the wireless > network will turn off the wireless radio. > > Any help/advice will be appreciated. > > Thanks.[/color] |
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| Re: Wireless networking help On Dec 28, 10:00*am, "Rick Rogers" <r...@mvps.org> wrote:[color=blue] > Turn off or remove the Windows Live OneCare firewall, use the one natively > included in Vista.[/color] Then I'd have Windows Live OneCare complaining about being "at risk" all the time. One would hope that Miscorosft wouldn't use different or incompatible firewalls in their own products. |
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| Re: Wireless networking help On Dec 28, 10:28*am, "Tyro" <T...@tyros.com> wrote:[color=blue] > I'm running Vista Ultimate on an HP 6730s notebook (Intel PRO/Wireless > 3945ABGN) and connecting to my desktop (Windows XP Pro) and Internet via a > Linksys WRT54G wireless router. *The desktop is hardwired to the routerand > the notebook connects wirelessly to the router. I'm running Windows Firewall > on both machines. Everything runs fine. > > Tyro >[/color] Gee thanks. That helps a lot. |
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| Re: Wireless networking help On Dec 28, 11:59*am, "Chad Harris" <Windo...@Blackcombville.net> wrote:[color=blue] > Hi-- > > On most laptops, notebooks, *and netbooks, there is an "F" button whereyou > can toggle wireless off and on by holding down the Fn and its key (it > usually has a wireless antenna logo. *Often it has 4 settings, Bluetooth On, > Bluetooth off, *Network Connection and Bluetooth On, Net Connection and > Bluetooth Off. *Check and make sure it's set to have wireless on.[/color] hey that helps. I found F5 that does what you say. That allowed me to turn off Access connections. In doing that I discovered that Access connections had a selected option to "turn off twireless radio when inactive." WTF?? I unchecked that option. Here's hoping. [color=blue] > > Although this is not mentioned enough, any router's 802.11 stability can be > spooked by anything that can emit EMR (EM radiation) that interferes with > your wireless frequency. *Make sure your router is a sufficient distance > from any box in your network that has two moving parts that can spook it--a > fan and a rotating hard drive, any monitors which can emit EMR, and entities > outside an office where construction is going on can also enter into the > equation. *The causes outside can even include pine trees because the > moisture in the needles emits a frequency that interferes with many routers. > > Put the router far enough away from anything moving inside a box and froma > monitor so it is stable. *This can be remedied if necessary by getting a 3-4 > meter USB connection(s) for the router. > > This instability can be corrected sometimes by just unplugging the router > and replugging it in but router placement is important. >[/color] My wireless router is all by itself in a room upstairs. Although none of the other computers connected to it wirelessly exhibits these same symptoms. Let's hope getting rid of Access Connections at least alleviates my problem. |
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| Re: Wireless networking help Actually, my recommendation is to remove OneCare altogether and use a different AV solution. -- Best of Luck, Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP [url]http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/[/url] Windows help - [url]www.rickrogers.org[/url] My thoughts [url]http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com[/url] "MikeB" <MPBrede******.com> wrote in message news:a163a9e8-5736-4f36-8188-b918f6d5c4f3@q18g2000vbn.googlegroups.com... On Dec 28, 10:00 am, "Rick Rogers" <r...@mvps.org> wrote:[color=blue] > Turn off or remove the Windows Live OneCare firewall, use the one natively > included in Vista.[/color] Then I'd have Windows Live OneCare complaining about being "at risk" all the time. One would hope that Miscorosft wouldn't use different or incompatible firewalls in their own products. |
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| Re: Wireless networking help On Dec 28, 1:39*pm, "Rick Rogers" <r...@mvps.org> wrote:[color=blue] > Actually, my recommendation is to remove OneCare altogether and use a > different AV solution. > > -- > Best of Luck, > > Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVPhttp://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ > Windows help -www.rickrogers.org > My thoughtshttp://rick-mvp.blogspot.com[/color] WLOC is terribly convenient to use. I much prefer it to Norton which I had previously. What firewall are you recommending? |
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| Re: Wireless networking help "MikeB" <MPBrede******.com> wrote in message news:a7fbf86b-583d-43da-af58-dd489ebf759f@m2g2000vbp.googlegroups.com... On Dec 28, 1:39 pm, "Rick Rogers" <r...@mvps.org> wrote:[color=blue] > Actually, my recommendation is to remove OneCare altogether and use a > different AV solution. > > -- > Best of Luck, > > Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft > MVPhttp://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ > Windows help -www.rickrogers.org > My thoughtshttp://rick-mvp.blogspot.com[/color] WLOC is terribly convenient to use. I much prefer it to Norton which I had previously. What firewall are you recommending? The Vista firewall.. maybe Avast or Avira free av programs.. -- Mike Hall - MVP How to construct a good post.. [url]http://dts-l.com/goodpost.htm[/url] How to use the Microsoft Product Support Newsgroups.. [url]http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?pr=newswhelp&style=toc[/url] Mike's Window - My Blog.. [url]http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/default.aspx[/url] |
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| Re: Wireless networking help I've never seen a need for anything other than the native one. Wouldn't recommend Norton's either, though the most recent iteration seems to be an improvement over previous performance hogging versions. My preferences lean towards eset's nod32 and kaspersky's product. The freeware ones, avg and antivir among others, aren't bad either. OneCare has been shown to cause a number of differing problems for end users. While it may be convenient, the issues it has caused are not insignificant. -- Best of Luck, Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP [url]http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/[/url] Windows help - [url]www.rickrogers.org[/url] My thoughts [url]http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com[/url] "MikeB" <MPBrede******.com> wrote in message news:a7fbf86b-583d-43da-af58-dd489ebf759f@m2g2000vbp.googlegroups.com... On Dec 28, 1:39 pm, "Rick Rogers" <r...@mvps.org> wrote:[color=blue] > Actually, my recommendation is to remove OneCare altogether and use a > different AV solution. > > -- > Best of Luck, > > Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft > MVPhttp://mvp.support.microsoft.com/ > Windows help -www.rickrogers.org > My thoughtshttp://rick-mvp.blogspot.com[/color] WLOC is terribly convenient to use. I much prefer it to Norton which I had previously. What firewall are you recommending? |
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| Re: Wireless networking help On Sun, 28 Dec 2008 11:22:50 -0800 (PST), MikeB <MPBrede******.com> wrote: [color=blue] >hey that helps. I found F5 that does what you say. That allowed me to >turn off Access connections. In doing that I discovered that Access >connections had a selected option to "turn off twireless radio when >inactive." WTF?? I unchecked that option. Here's hoping.[/color] Also do two more things: - In Power Options, Advanced, set the wireless card to "maximum performance" - In Device Manager, wireless, set so that windows is not allowed to use power management on the card. Post if you need more specific instructions on doing either. |
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| Re: Wireless networking help On Sun, 28 Dec 2008 12:13:37 -0800 (PST), MikeB <MPBrede******.com> wrote: [color=blue] >WLOC is terribly convenient to use. I much prefer it to Norton which I >had previously. > >What firewall are you recommending?[/color] You've got a system with serious connection difficulties, and you're going with "convenient to use"? Dump WLOC, use the Vista Firewall or Zone Alarm Free (not both). Use Avast for A/V. Both are free. |
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