From: jmassa53 on
Hi folks. I have several PCs on a home network via a Linksys router.
They are all configured to obtain the IP address automatically.
Suddenly today, one of them says the network connection has "little or
no connectivity" and it won't connect to the other systems or the
internet. The other computers are working fine, so it's not the
router.

I checked the router and if I assign this PC a static IP address and
DNS server, it connects fine. However, as this is a laptop, I need to
be able to have mobile wireless access, so I need the automatic IP
address to work. Any suggestions? Thanks.
From: John Wunderlich on
jmassa53(a)gmail.com wrote in
news:1e150458-a103-4b58-b632-0e3925f62ec8(a)e39g2000hsf.googlegroups.co
m:

> Hi folks. I have several PCs on a home network via a Linksys
> router. They are all configured to obtain the IP address
> automatically. Suddenly today, one of them says the network
> connection has "little or no connectivity" and it won't connect to
> the other systems or the internet. The other computers are
> working fine, so it's not the router.
>
> I checked the router and if I assign this PC a static IP address
> and DNS server, it connects fine. However, as this is a laptop, I
> need to be able to have mobile wireless access, so I need the
> automatic IP address to work. Any suggestions? Thanks.
>

Just because the other computers work fine doesn't mean the router
doesn't have a problem. Unplug your router from the wall, count to 10,
and plug it back in again. It's very possible that will fix your
problem. I have a Linksys router and I have to do this every third
month or so.

HTH,
John
From: Chuck [MVP] on
On Fri, 9 May 2008 14:32:42 -0700 (PDT), jmassa53(a)gmail.com wrote:

>Hi folks. I have several PCs on a home network via a Linksys router.
>They are all configured to obtain the IP address automatically.
>Suddenly today, one of them says the network connection has "little or
>no connectivity" and it won't connect to the other systems or the
>internet. The other computers are working fine, so it's not the
>router.
>
>I checked the router and if I assign this PC a static IP address and
>DNS server, it connects fine. However, as this is a laptop, I need to
>be able to have mobile wireless access, so I need the automatic IP
>address to work. Any suggestions? Thanks.

Could the router DHCP server have a limited scope, or MAC address filter in
place?

I presume that the DHCP client service is running on the computer? If so, your
next bet is LSP / Winsock corruption.
<http://networking.nitecruzr.net/2005/05/problems-with-lsp-winsock-layer-in.html>
http://networking.nitecruzr.net/2005/05/problems-with-lsp-winsock-layer-in.html

--
Cheers,
Chuck, MS-MVP 2005-2007 [Windows - Networking]
http://networking.nitecruzr.net/
From: JackMassa on
John:
Thanks for the suggestion. Unplugging the router fixed it. I thought
of this early on , but forgot to try it. Thanks!

- Jack

On May 9, 7:40 pm, John Wunderlich <jwunderl...(a)lycos.com> wrote:
>
> Just because the other computers work fine doesn't mean the router
> doesn't have a problem.  Unplug your router from the wall, count to 10,
> and plug it back in again.  It's very possible that will fix your
> problem.  I have a Linksys router and I have to do this every third
> month or so.
>
> HTH,
>   John