Lan setup vista


















All rights reserved. Covered by US Patent. Come for the solution, stay for everything else. Welcome to our community! Hello experts, I don't think my problem is a big one. But anyway, here is where I'm stuck. I have 3 computers. I have manually setup my LAN ip addresses on the 2 secondary computers and the internet is working just fine. Now, I bought another laptop, which has Vista Ultimate installed in it and I want to connect that to the internet too.

So, what I do is, connect it with the hub and configure the ip address of the LAN manually again but the internet doesn't work. I am sure I am not configuring my LAN properly. Any help with this experts? If you have a printer, before you begin print out this page! Step 1: Open up the start menu, and click Run. You should now see the following window. Step 2: Type cmd in the Open: box, and click Okay.

The will bring up a black command prompt window. Step 3: The command prompt may look different on your screen, but it doesn't really matter. This will display a lot of information. If it scrolls off the top you may need to enlarge the window. Step 4: I want you to write down some of the information in this window. Make sure to note which is which. We are going to use this information a little bit later.

We are only concerned with IPv4 entries, you can ignore the IPv6 stuff. The name server entries are a bit complicated. Name Server is just another name for DNS domain name server server. Some router's act as a proxy between the actual name servers and your computer. You will know when this is the case, because the Default Gateway will list the same ip address as the Name Servers entry.

We need to have the correct Name Server IP addresses. If we do not, you will not be able to browse the web. There are a couple ways to get these. The first way is to log into your router's web interface, and look at your router's status page.

Write down the ip adresses of your Name Servers. They should know the ip addresses of your Name Servers right off. If they ask you why you need them, you can tell them you are trying to setup a static IP address on your computer. If they try to sell you a static external ip address, don't buy it.

That's an entirely different thing that what you are trying to setup. Type exit in this window, then press the enter key to close it. Step 7: Single click Manage Network Connections on the left side of your screen. Step 8: You may have several network connections in this window. I want you to right click on the one you use to connect to the internet. Then click properties.

If you are unsure of which one that is, right click it and then click disable. Open a new copy of your web browser? Did it open a webpage? Right click the Network Adapter drivers. Select Update driver software. Hope it helps, reply to us with the status of your issue. We will be happy to assist you. Was this reply helpful? Yes No. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. I am myself cautious about switching to Windows 10 from Windows 7, much for the trouble I anticipate regarding networking with the rest of the home network, with e.

Vista Home Premium machines. So I'd like to see more information from Microsoft on backward compatibility in that area. There are How-To articles about this for both Windows Vista and Windows 7 , but none for Windows 10, which makes me even more hesitant to go for Windows 10 at this point in time. Threats include any threat of suicide, violence, or harm to another. Any content of an adult theme or inappropriate to a community web site.

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