Windows did not receive any response from the wireless router
I don't understand it, working one day and not the next. I don't have any other networks to try, I am in a remote area and use satelite internet. I ran a virus check and that came up with nothing. I will check through my event logs again in case I missed something. See if changing channels on the router helps. Hi Thanks for your replies and advice. Yesterday just before I gave up for the day, I reset the winsock and switched off my laptop.
Today I switched it on intending to try different channels, and my laptop found and connected to my network! I have run my laptop all day, rebooted a few times and can still connect, so hopefully the problem has been resolved.
Thanks very much for taking the time to give me your advice! You must log in or sign up to reply here. Show Ignored Content. Unfortunately, unlike with a Wi-Fi router, a computer connected to a Wi-Fi client bridge can't normally communicate with both the client bridge configuration and the Internet at the same time. A bit later, more accurate signal is reported, but Windows is still reporting full The problem isn't Windows itself, but the wireless device driver from the wireless vendor -- Windows is just reporting what the driver tells it.
In addition, this doesn't tell you anything at all about signal quality and the amount of interference , which are as important as signal strength. Moral: Don't trust signal strength or speed as reported by Windows.
You may or may not get more accurate information from the wireless manufacturer's connection manager, or a tool like Network Stumbler NetStumbler instead. You may not easily know about this kind of problem if Windows isn't configured to notify you.
Checking "Notify me when this connection has limited or no connectivity" is recommended. The likely cause of the problem is a wired network adapter that isn't connected. This issue is known to affect at least some Intel wired network adapters with Windows XP drivers dated and later.
Apparently this problem was introduced by Intel in Version 8 of its Windows XP drivers, possibly as an Law of Unintended Consequences of power management-related changes. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. So I discontinue the sync process and tried to check my e-mail from outlook. Found it cannot send and receive mail.
Open my browser and found it disconnected. So then using the LAN cable, fortunately it work. So I wonder what has happen to my wireless feature on my laptop? Can someone advise me what I should do? Many Thanks. This thread is locked.
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