Re: Dial-up clients drop connections
- From: "Kelly" <kelly@xxxxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 13 Apr 2005 00:02:40 -0500
How interesting and shame on Wally-World. :o(
--
In memory of our dear friend, MVP Alex Nichol: http://www.dts-l.org/
All the Best,
Kelly (MS-MVP)
Troubleshooting Windows XP
http://www.kellys-korner-xp.com
"Justin Haygood" <jhaygood86@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:ZlY6e.59376$vK6.31010@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> Reason they both drop? Walmart Connect and America Online 9.0 are both the
> same service provider, and has a history of dropping dialup connections.
>
> http://reports.internic.net/cgi/whois?whois_nic=wmconnect.com&type=domain
>
> Domain Name: WMCONNECT.COM
> Registrar: NETWORK SOLUTIONS, LLC.
> Whois Server: whois.networksolutions.com
> Referral URL: http://www.networksolutions.com
> Name Server: DNS-03.NS.AOL.COM
> Name Server: DNS-04.NS.AOL.COM
> Status: REGISTRAR-LOCK
> Updated Date: 09-dec-2004
> Creation Date: 01-feb-2001
> Expiration Date: 01-feb-2006
>
> Its a branded version of AOL's CompuServe service, much like Gateway.net
> and Netscape ISP.
>
> Gary Levy wrote:
>> Windows XP Home with Service Pack 2
>>
>> Had a Pc frought with hundreds of spyware occurences and numerous
>> viruses, which have been removed using several competing products applied
>> one at a time in safe mode
>>
>> I cannot get two unrelated Internet Service Provider dial-up products
>> (Walmart's WMConnect and AOL 9.0) to maintain a connection. The software
>> images are known to
>> be good and operational. Both products physically synchronize with the
>> respondent modem, authenticate, attempt to "talk to the network", then
>> drop the connection.
>> I have used alternate modems, RJ-11 jacks, and RJ-11 cables known to work
>> otherwise.
>>
>> I have installed, de-installed, and re-installed each product without the
>> presence of each other.
>>
>> After creating an alternate profile as a "Computer Administrator", I am
>> unable to install software without using the default (administrator)
>> profile.
>>
>> The event logs refer to IPSEC errors. Unfortunately,a search of
>> support.microsoft.com produced
>> nothing conclusive; e.g., knowledgebase article 328213
>>
>>
>> I also reset the TCPIP properties as follows.
>> How to reset Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) in Windows XP
>> The NetShell utility (netsh) is a command-line tool for configuring and
>> monitoring Windows XP networking. Extreme cases may warrant the removal
>> of the TCP/IP protocol..With the NetShell utility, you can reset the
>> TCP/IP stack to restore it to its state that existed when the operating
>> system was installed. In Windows XP, a reset command is available in the
>> IP context of the NetShell utility. When you run the reset command, it
>> rewrites pertinent registry keys that are used by the Internet Protocol
>> (TCP/IP) stack to reach the same result as the removal and the
>> reinstallation of the protocol. Command usage
>> netsh int ip reset [log_file_name]
>>
>> To run the command successfully, you must specify a file name for the log
>> where actions that are taken by netsh will be recorded
>>
>>
>> Command samples
>> netsh int ip reset resetlog.txt
>> netsh int ip reset c:\resetlog.txt
>>
>> Reference :
>> http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;Q299357&sd=tech
>> January 06, 2005. Microsoft Article 299357 July 12, 2004
>>
>>
>> Short of a manufacturer system "recovery" or reformatting and
>> reinstalling XP, any other suggestions?
.
- References:
- Dial-up clients drop connections
- From: Gary Levy
- Re: Dial-up clients drop connections
- From: Justin Haygood
- Dial-up clients drop connections
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