When I still could see the wireless networks and couldn't connect I tried an
option to manually connect. Under the security setting options were: none,
WEP and 802.11x, there wasn't an option for WPA.
I tried setting the router to have no security but was still unable to see
any networks.
Device manager shows no problems - it is not disabled.
I am not sure about Vista SP1 so have downloaded it for install next time I
go to her house.
If that netsh command was a problem - is there a way to reverse the effects
and start setting up the wireless card from scratch? I am not near the
machine and the command was run from the start menu so I don't even know if
I could find it again to see what I did. It was suggested in a
troubleshooting menu on the machine.
The vista machine is 21 months old and wireless was working until recently.
The router is new.
What are the steps to remove and reinstall the wireless capabilities in
Vista (which I am not very familiar with)?
"Lem" <lemp40@unknownhost> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>M Skabialka wrote:
>> A friend with a vista PC was having problems connecting wirelessly to a
>> router. It had been working OK for months then she decided to download
>> the MS Office 2007 trial. Since then her wireless connection stopped
>> working (though I have no idea why this happened at this time). Their
>> other computer was also having a really slow ethernet connection so I had
>> them buy a new cisco wireles router with his new PC. I told the Vista
>> machine to connect to the new SSID but I had set up WPA on the router and
>> vista didn't have that option. So then I changed it to WEP on the router
>> but vista said it couldn't connect. A help menu had me run some netsh
>> commands about adhoc and infrastructure but it still didn't work so I
>> rebooted. Now the vista PC doesn't even see any wireless networks
>> available, but a laptop I tried as a test still sees three SSIDs
>> including the new one.
>>
>> What are my troubleshooting steps in vista to find out what is wrong with
>> her wireless connection and how to fix it?
>> And how can I find out what is still making the network still slow - the
>> other machine is brand new with WinXP?
>
> This setup probably is too far gone to fix using newsgroup advice. In
> particular, who knows what you managed to do with netsh. But here goes
> anyway.
>
> This is simply wrong:
>> I had set up WPA on the router and vista didn't have that option.
>
> What led you to that conclusion? Have you installed Vista sp1?
>
> Start by ensuring that the laptop's wifi adapter is actually turned on and
> functioning. Check the documentation for a physical switch or Fn+Fkey
> combination. Check Device Manager.
>
> If you get things back to where you can detect the presence of wireless
> networks, then configure the router to use *no* security at all (no
> encryption, no IP filters, no MAC filters, etc.) and try to connect. If
> you can connect when there is no security present, then add back
> WPA2-Personal encryption and try connecting again.
>
> --
> Lem -- MS-MVP
>
> To the moon and back with 2K words of RAM and 36K words of ROM.
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apollo_Guidance_Computer
> http://history.nasa.gov/afj/compessay.htm