Search results
1 lis 2014 · What eventually fixed it for me was: 1.) Right Click Computer 2.) Click on Manage 3.) Click on Device Manager 4.) Uninstall the internal network adapter driver. 5.) Restart 6.) let windows reinstall it and it worked. I am guessing it maybe got a corrupt file that deals with the dns service.
- DNS cache will not clear on a Windows XP machine?
I have a Windows XP machine that refuses to connect to one...
- DNS cache will not clear on a Windows XP machine?
You may have a dns server that's returning IPv6 addresses, or a machine that is sending out IPv6 address requests, and then a browser that only knows IPv4 routes to the web. After that, if and only if you still haven't found the problem, you can try a reset of your ip stack.
I have a Windows XP machine that refuses to connect to one of my servers no matter what I've tried. It points to a null IP address (not the correct IP) and HTML-get as well as ping and tracert all aim at the wrong address. Of course I flushed the DNS cache with ipconfig /flushdns, and even restarted the dns cache service and rebooted a few times.
1 cze 2012 · Is the IP address the machine is given through DHCP a correct one? If static, make sure it is on the same subnet as the DNS server. Are the DNS entries correct? [ipconfig /all] to check. Try using 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 for giggles. Has the HOSTS file been messed with? [C:\windows\system32\drivers\etc] Checked for proxies?
Having DNS server issues? Can't reach any web pages on a Windows XP or Vista computer? Understand the causes, troubleshoot, and fix DNS issues in Win XP and Win Vista.
The solution in this case was a simple reinstall of Windows XP SP3 and everything was then able to resolve DNS correctly.
Edit the Characteristics = 0xa0 entry and replace 0xa0 with 0×80. Save the file, and then exit Notepad. In Control Panel, double-click Network Connections, right-click Local Area Connection, and then select Properties.