(posted from ie6.browser using msnews server;
I do not have access to USENET but am leaving the cross-posting
as is in case it propagates to the non-MS newsgroups somehow.)
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed) oups.com...
> As of yesterday, I am unable to browse to one particular page from any
> of my computers. I have 43 computers on a router, so it's not a cookies
> or cache issue. Also, my ISP can browse to the page. I'm wondering if
> it could be my modem?
Very unlikely to be your modem.
Start diagnosing from first principles and simulate each step of a connection.
First of all you haven't given us your OS and version so I will guess
that it's NTx ;] Also it is much easier to discuss a specific example
than have to describe procedures generically.
Start by proving that your DNS knows the site's subdomain or alias
and is not getting a timeout finding it. E.g. use nslookup or ping -n 1
to do that.
If that seems Ok use telnet 80 to prove that you can get an HTTP
connection opened to that site. You can also try giving it something
simple like GET / (i.e. GET<space><slash><Enter>) as a request
to simulate the request that IE is giving and perhaps see exactly what
IE might be getting as an initial response. Etc.
Use of an alternate browser would similarly prove that you have some
connectivity with the site. In addition to that you could connect through
a proxy tracer such as fiddlertool to get some idea of what was happening
and compare the two traces.
Alternatively, the most accurate diagnostic would be to capture a packet
trace of the actual request by IE and the response from the server.
XP Pro users can use netcap from their Support Tools package;
others can use something like Ethereal. I use both, with Ethereal to format
the .cap files that netcap creates.
Note that while IE is involved with this problem that the real expertise
you need is probably in a networking newsgroup.
In any case here is an interactive troubleshooter which you can try.
It contains a link to an XP newsgroup which specializes in networking.
http://www.michna.com/kb/
Good luck
Robert Aldwinckle
---
>
> I have visited anonymous browsing web sites, and can browse to the page
> in question via their anonymous browsing tools, so I don't know what's
> wrong. Tried using a proxy to browse (in my IE lan settings), but this
> won't let me get email, and I can't get it to work in other programs,
> like Poster Toaster. Any advice? I'm really desperate at this point.
>
> I've posted this to the three groups I thought would best be able to
> help me.
>
> Thanks
>