On Fri, 11 Mar 2005 10:24:06 -0800, "RP"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>I using a Siemens SpeedStream Powerline access point in my basement. A
>powerline Adapter is plug in a (9FE-904) D-link Router, my wife's computer
>routs and my daughter is also connected from the d-link and they get good
>service. (We have Cable service & xp operating sys.). For some reason, I
>have a strong signal(very good to Excellent) and I get the "limited or no
>connectivity" message and "this problem accrued because the Network did not
>assign a Network address to the computer". What!! Please help!
Are you wifes and daughters computahs connected via wireless or via
CAT5 cable directly to the D-Link router?
For some reason, the DHCP server in the D-Link router, did not deliver
an IP address to your computer. Such things happen. Start by power
cycling the D-Link router. Wait about 2 minutes to be sure the router
is alive and well. Check if the wifes and daughters machines are
still able to access the internet. Then reboot or restart your
computer.
You can watch it happen with ipconfig. Open an MSDOS window with:
Start -> Run -> cmd <enter>
and run the command:
ipconfig
If your IP address is 0.0.0.0, then it's still trying to get an IP
address. Wait a while longer.
If your IP address is 169.254.xxx.xxx, DHCP has failed and XP assigned
a useless default IP address. That's what the "limited connectivity"
message means.
If your IP address is 192.168.xxx.xxx or something similar, you win.
It worked.
You can sometime force it to try again with:
ipconfig /renew
However, when things are screwed up, I often get hangs or bogus
configuration error messages. Try it anyway.
The most common reason for DHCP failure is that your WEP key or WPA
pass phrase is wrong or has changed. You may want to check this.
--
Jeff Liebermann
(E-Mail Removed)
150 Felker St #D
http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 AE6KS 831-336-2558