it says cannot repair a connection when it's emdia state is disconencted -
and the wireless asaptor and bluetooth say disconencted.
Will try the fix about broadcast flag and see if that resolves it. Strange
that all worked absolutely fine for the first 3 months
"Robert Aldwinckle" wrote:
> (cross-post added to Vista Networking)
> "DBrooker" <> wrote in message
> news:6BC6B36A-98EA-40D4-A2AE-...
> > Have Vista small biz and for the last month it disconnects from the wireless
> > router, and says local access only.
>
>
> Does ipconfig /all change then? In particular do you lose an adapter
> or a default gateway?
>
>
> >
> > Have tried disabling security, repair etc. I always have to reboot to
> > establish the conenction again. Typically will be connected for an hour or so.
>
>
> It may help to elaborate on "repair etc.". However, rebooting is often
> the simplest repair anyway.
>
>
> >
> > Have tried disabling firewalls etc, to no avail. I am sure this must be
> > something to do with some update, as prior to a month ago I never ever had
> > this issue.
> >
> > I have come back from a trip around the world, and established this was a
> > problem that started at some point during that trip.
> >
> > I have used many different routers, and also updated the intel wirelss
> > drivers and even tried roll-back the driver to see if that was the issue.
> >
> > Anybody got any ideas? When I try ipconfig/renew it says cannot renew the
> > wireless
>
>
> Does that adapter have DHCP enabled?
>
>
> > (and also the bluetooth, though my mouse still works) when they are
> > disconencted. Go to try to enable it and it does not work - have to reboot.
> >
> > Appreciate any insight, have seen this issue posted elsewhere.
>
>
> Perhaps on a more relevant newsgroup? <eg>
> (Note: cross-post added to Vista Networking)
>
>
> > It also
> > happened once when the lan cable was plugged in, so may be an issue with
> > Vista networking itself?..
> > Dave
>
>
> Or your drivers... If that's what you meant by "something to do with some update"
> try backing off recent updates or try updating from the manufacturer's site. Etc.
> BTW XP uses the expression "roll back" when describing how to undo updates
> to drivers. I guess that Vista will use the same terminology? FYI in XP there's an
> unindexed help page about it, which I can reach from an indexed page called
> Repair Overview. E.g. press Win-F1 and search for "roll back" (with quotes).
>
>
> HTH
>
> Robert Aldwinckle
> ---
>
>
>