"Pete Smith" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed) ...
> In article <bjs5ea$sd6$(E-Mail Removed)>, (E-Mail Removed)
> says...
> > have also in desperation tried to install the laptop directly to
broadband
> > thru just connecting it to the netgear adsl modem and using the CD BT
> > supplied. but no joy. it didn't want to surf.
> >
>
> This (to me) implies that there's a "problem" with your laptop.
>
> At the risk of stating the obvious, what caches are the laptop using?
>
> If you can ping a web address, and resolve the address from a name, that
> means that things are mostly working.
>
> Can you pick up email from your laptop? If so, there's nothing seriously
> wrong, so I'd put it down to a configuration problem on the laptop.
>
> HTH
>
> Pete.
>
er, no in a word.
Desktop PC had been picking up email using a normal dial up setting and
picking up emails from several addresses quite happily before I switched the
PC over to broadband. When broadband was up and running, I didn't have to do
anything with Outlook, it just found the non-BT ISPs and pulled the mail off
as usual (only much quicker of course).
The laptop, however, was set up to pull off my work email so had a corporate
email setup rather.
With the desktop running broadband and the laptop with the xircom card in it
(with utp cable plugged in), loading outlook brings up the inbox without it
popping up the retry/work offline/help box. then cliking on send/receive
brings up the 'connecting to MS Exchange Server' box, the WLAN, LAN and WAN
lights flicker but the box just disappears with no mail going or coming
back - any test msg just sits in my outbox. presumably outlook can't see the
exchange server its looking for as it'll be on a VPN and just gives up.
however, taking out the utp cable which was connected to the router remember
and the work offline/retry box does come up. presumably having the utp cable
plugged into the router or having the wireless card installed when running
outlook is enough for the pc to say 'yep i'm on a network'?
however, copying the pst file from the desktop pc to the laptop and change
the service profile on the laptop from corporate to internet mail makes no
difference either; sending and receiving just comes with error msgs saying
it cannot find the mail servers.
Matt.