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#1
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Greetings
I currently have a network that someone else set up for me, and I now want to add another computer to the network, but have got lost! The existing network consists of a desktop PC wired to a Linksys modem/router, and a laptop connecting via a wireless adapter. It all works perfectly well. I now have another desktop that I want in another room in the house. I have installed a wireless adapter PCI card (after installing the software as instructed). An icon has appeared in the taskbar, and when I run the mouse over it, it tells me it is ""Wireless Network Connection (xxxx)" (where xxxx is the name of the network) with excellent signal strength, but limited or no connectivity. I have tried doing a "repair" but the end message is "The network did not assign a network address to the computer" Can anyone please walk me through what I need to do to get this working. All 3 computers have Windows XP. More info on request of course. Cheers Oh God It's Him Again |
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#2
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On Mon, 31 Jan 2005 16:55:16 -0000, "Oh God It's Him Again"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote: >All 3 computers have Windows XP. >More info on request of course. determine the IP addresses of all the machines and post them here, if you select the network conneciton icon in Network Connections the IP is diplayed on the left sidebar (or right mouse/status/support), note also how is assigned manual or DHCP. Phil -- spamcop.net address commissioned 18/06/04 Come on down ! |
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#3
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"Oh God It's Him Again" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:41fe62f6$0$96062$(E-Mail Removed)... > The existing network consists of a desktop PC wired to a Linksys > modem/router, and a laptop connecting via a wireless adapter. It all > works perfectly well. > > I now have another desktop that I want in another room in the house. I > have installed a wireless adapter PCI card (after installing the software > as instructed). [snip] > I have tried doing a "repair" but the end message is "The network did not > assign a network address to the computer" > > Can anyone please walk me through what I need to do to get this working. Possibly the router has MAC filtering enabled, and (naturally) the MAC address of the new card is not known to the router. Consulting your router's documentation should tell you how to check if this is the cause, and if so, how to resolve it (ie adding the new address). HTH, Alex |
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#4
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OK - thanks for the reply.
Current desktop is 192.168.1.102 subnet 255.255.255.0, DHCP assigned Laptop is 192.168.1.101 subnet 255.255.255.0, DHCP assigned New desktop is 169.254.37.35 subnet 255.255.0.0 automatic private address Any help? |
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#5
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"Oh God It's Him Again" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message news:41fe6d6c$0$7938$(E-Mail Removed)... > OK - thanks for the reply. > > Current desktop is 192.168.1.102 subnet 255.255.255.0, DHCP assigned > > Laptop is 192.168.1.101 subnet 255.255.255.0, DHCP assigned > > > New desktop is 169.254.37.35 subnet 255.255.0.0 automatic private address > > Any help? > > Manually alter the last one to 192.168.0.xxx , or release all then try again, im not too good with words and never dont it with xp. You could ping |
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#6
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How do I manually alter it?
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#7
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On Mon, 31 Jan 2005 17:39:47 -0000, "Oh God It's Him Again"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote: >New desktop is 169.254.37.35 subnet 255.255.0.0 automatic private address >Any help? yes, the latter machine has not been given an IP address by a DHCP server or had one set manually. you could manuallty set it to 192.168.1.103 subnet 255.255.255.0 (for example). Some routers are limited to giving out two IP addresses, may be worth checking the spec and seeing if there is a limit in the setup pages. Doing a "repair" should refresh the IP address, but if there is some problem with encryption, MAC address filtering of whatever then the new machine isn't allowed to talk to the router. Phil -- spamcop.net address commissioned 18/06/04 Come on down ! |
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#8
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On 31/01/2005 Phil Thompson wrote:
> On Mon, 31 Jan 2005 17:39:47 -0000, "Oh God It's Him Again" > <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote: > > > New desktop is 169.254.37.35 subnet 255.255.0.0 automatic private > > address Any help? > > yes, the latter machine has not been given an IP address by a DHCP > server or had one set manually. Windows built in DHCP dishes out 169 addreses. I would think the OP used the XP network 'wizard' which is usually guaranteed to screw things up. -- Jeff Gaines Posted with XanaNews 1.17.1.2 |
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#9
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OK I set the IP address and subnet as sugested, also copied default gateway
and DNS server info from the other computers. Now the icon in the taskbar tells me "Status: Connected" - only I still can't get online or see the rest of the network. Could we perhaps start from scratch, and someone tell me what the process should be to bring in a new computer and add it to an existing network. |
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#10
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On Mon, 31 Jan 2005 17:14:49 -0000, "Alex Fraser" <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote: >"Oh God It's Him Again" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message >news:41fe62f6$0$96062$(E-Mail Removed)... >> The existing network consists of a desktop PC wired to a Linksys >> modem/router, and a laptop connecting via a wireless adapter. It all >> works perfectly well. >> >> I now have another desktop that I want in another room in the house. I >> have installed a wireless adapter PCI card (after installing the software >> as instructed). >[snip] >> I have tried doing a "repair" but the end message is "The network did not >> assign a network address to the computer" >> >> Can anyone please walk me through what I need to do to get this working. > >Possibly the router has MAC filtering enabled, and (naturally) the MAC >address of the new card is not known to the router. Consulting your router's >documentation should tell you how to check if this is the cause, and if so, >how to resolve it (ie adding the new address). > While you are checking the MAC filtering, check that the DHCP server will allocate more than two addresses and set the new PC to use DHCP again. To get your MAC address for the new PC, goto start->run and type CMD and "enter". In the command window, type ipconfig /all and this will list the connection details for your network interfaces. PeeGee -- The reply address is a spam trap. If you need to reply directly, put the UK where it should be - first. |
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