Windows Vista Connect To Internet

Windows Vista Connect To Internet 9,4/10 2491 reviews

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Active4 years ago

I have a Windows Vista computer which i have used for about 2 years without any issues. Recently, i started having problems connecting to the internet with this Vista computer. My other XP Computers are fine and can connect to the Internet. Regardless of wired or wireless connection, i am unable to get the Vista computer connected to the web. To connect to a wireless network in Windows Vista, follow these steps: Click Start, and then click Connect to. Click the wireless network to which you want to connect, and then click Connect.

I have a Windows Vista computer which i have used for about 2 years without any issues.Recently, i started having problems connecting to the internet with this Vista computer. My other XP Computers are fine and can connect to the Internet.

Regardless of wired or wireless connection, i am unable to get the Vista computer connected to the web. The Status remains 'Limited' for IPv4 and IPv6. It also shows unidentified Public Network, and is able to connect to the router. However, there's a disconnection between the router and the internet.

Any help will be greatly appreciated, i have been on this for 4 weeks now.

Joel Coehoorn
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KolaKola

2 Answers

I would skip some troubleshooting on this and just reset the tcp/ip stack. If that doesn't work then start toubleshooting.

To open a command prompt, click Start and then click Run. Copy and paste (or type) the following command in the Open box and then press ENTER:

cmd

At the command prompt, copy and paste (or type) the following command and then press ENTER:

netsh int ip reset

Reboot the computer.

Windows Vista Cannot Connect To Internet Unidentified Network

Chris HarrodChris Harrod

Basic troubleshooting.

Internet

Can you ping the router? If so the connection to this is ok.
Can you ping other computers on the network by their computer name or by IP Address? If so then your router is servicing internal requests ok
Can you ping 173.194.36.104 - Google's IP address. - If so outside connections are ok.Can you ping www.google.com? If so then your DNS server is working.

If you can do all this then I would test if you can use another browser.
Also check that no proxy setting have been put in place. Opera doesn't use the default ones shared by IE, FF and Chrome. Maybe try that.

Windows vista laptop won

If all that fails comment back and we'll go on to more advanced things.

Joe TaylorJoe Taylor
10.9k7 gold badges42 silver badges67 bronze badges

Connect To

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged windows-vistawireless-networkinginternetweb or ask your own question.

I recently upgraded from a Cisco DPC3825 Docsis 3 Gateway to a HitronTechnologies CGN2 Docsis 3 Gateway. The wireless on the Cisco was working perfectly. Now the Hitron is working fine (I have a Nintendo Wii, a tablet, and a smartphone all connected and accessing the Internet) but Vista cannot access the Internet even though it will connect to the router fine. I just get “Identifying…” and “Unidentified network” alternating, and it stays at Local Only.

Windows Vista Won't Connect To Internet

So far I’ve tried restarting the router, my laptop, and the wireless adapter multiple times, reinstalling the wireless drivers, connecting to the router manually and through the wizard, setting up the network through Vista’s wizard, renewing my IP addresses, and resetting the TCP/IP. I have no idea where to begin next so any help will be greatly appreciated.

Ill Windows Vista Connect To The Internet

Thanks.

Windows Vista Wireless Network

  1. Normally on Windows Vista and 7, when you connect to a network for the very first time it needs to know what type of network it is, these type are home network, work network, or public network. If it pops up a window prompting for what type of network you are connecting to, select home network.

  2. I went through this menace during last two days couldnt find anything absolutely anything on internet to solve this problem for me. I called my internet service company helpline, the guy told me to connect the laptop through ethernet cable and allow him to take control, he thereafter just changed the name of network to one with less alphabets, password or phrase to a short pin of numeric ones, wpa-personal to wep and everything started working :)

  3. incompatibility of the wireless network with your adapter.
    Change the network key type from the configuration panel of your router

  4. Did your new router come with a CD? Try installing that on your PC and try connecting again, sometimes that works.

  5. Did u use the same SSID for the new router, as it was in the old one?
    if so, there might be an issue in connection. Go for a new SSID.
    You also mentioned 'connecting to the router manually' how? Did u use an ethernet cable or still wireless?
    Also try deleting the existing network connection, and try configuring a new one.

  6. start >> run >> type in 'cmd' >> rt click on cmd.exe >> run as administrator
    then type in the following command:
    'netsh int ip reset reset.txt'
    press enter, then restart your computer while the wireless router is on, and you should be good to go, else, check the DHCP settings on your router's configuration page, and set DHCP to on. mobile / tablet and other devices generally store the ip received from a modem, while windows might refresh its ip pool at every boot.

  7. Are you able to connect to internet in Windows Safe Mode with Networking.
    http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows-vista/Start-your-computer-in-safe-mode

    check if the wireless network name is the same when it was on the previous router, if yes then change it. Network and Sharing Centre and then Manage Wireless Networks. Remove the network from the list, Then go back to Network and Sharing Centre and Connect To A Network...

    perhaps firewall blocking you.

    Configuring Windows Vista to use local DNS server
    http://www.simpledns.com/kb.aspx?kbid=1188
    1. Control Panel, Network Connections
    2. Right click on Wireless Network Connection
    3. Disable IP v6
    http://www.home-network-help.com/disable-ipv6.html
    4. Double click on IP Version 4
    5. Choose 'Use the following IP address'
    6. enter IP Address according to the router configuration.
    7. Subnet mask: 255.255.255.0
    8 Default gateway and Preffered DNS server have the same IP (router IP).
    8. let the alternate DNS server empty

  8. '..even though it will connect to the router fine' I am having serious doubts about the phrase. Are you sure it is connecting to the router at all? Can the Vista talk to any other devices on the network (even ping them)? Most likely, it is assigning itself an APIPA (169.254.x.x) range address and not getting one from the router (DHCP server). You need to verify this to rule out the possibilitiy. If the machine is getting an address in this range, there is a problem with the machine connecting to a DHCP server for its addressing information.