On Tue, 6 May 2008 14:14:22 -0400, "David Mayerovitch"
<(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>I have a high-speed broadband DSL connection from the phone company. It
>appears under Network Connections as "Broadband connection, WAN Miniport
>(PPPOE)". There is also a "Local area connection, Unidentified network,
>Realtek ... "
>
>Network discovery is On.
>
>At system startup, the icon in the lower right corner of the screen shows
>the warning exclamation point. In the Network and Sharing Center, the
>diagram shows a broken connection to the Internet.
>
>When I explicitly "Connect to", the connection to the Internet is
>established (or when I launch a program that requires an Internet
>connection.)
>
>What do I have to do to establish the connection at system startup?
First be sure the settings/connections are as the phone company
expects them. If you see unidentified anything, that can spell
trouble. There should be no need for you to connect to. That should be
automatically handled behind the scenes as the computer boots up and
shortly after it enter Windows. When you see an exclamation point
and/or a broken Network diagram that's a telltale sign something isn't
right.
I haven't used a phone company connection for years. However I do use
a high speed cable modem and I've seem similar things. Rarely the
cable company without notice will switch the IP address or do
something behind the scenes that can mess up the connection and I'll
see similar indications to what you just said.
Sometimes you can ask Vista to repair itself. There's a option
somewhere in Network connections that can sometimes repair what's
broken with your Internet connection. If that doesn't do it and you're
sure everything is as it should be according to your ISP then I would
have them walk you through the steps to set up a new connection.
That's what you're paying for.
>
>"Adam Albright" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>> On Tue, 6 May 2008 12:03:08 -0400, "David Mayerovitch"
>> <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote:
>>
>>>I want to connect to my broadband Internet connection automatically
>>>whenever
>>>my system starts up.
>>
>> Well duh, if it isn't already doing that SOMETHING is wrong. Assumes
>> you really have a working broadband connection, not a dial-up. If you
>> do, if things are working correctly you are ALWAYS on and Windows
>> should start up the connection to the Internet automatically without
>> you doing anything assuming you gave it a good IP address and have a
>> modem/router, whatever hardware you need properly configured.
>>>
>>>In XP I did this by creating a shortcut to the connection and placing it
>>>in
>>
>> Go to Control Panel Network sharing, etc..
>>
>> What do you see?
>>
>> If things are working as they should you should see a icon that looks
>> like a PC with the name of your computer, another icon with the name
>> of your broadband provider and a third icon that simply says Internet
>> and has a world globe. There should be a green line connected all
>> three. If not, something wrong.
>>
>> Underneath, Network discovered should be on. If you don't see this at
>> startup after you have successfully booted and are in Windows, use the
>> left pane to help you find out what's not set up correctly.
>>
>> You should see a little computer icon in the lower right hand corner
>> of your desktop. That should ALWAYS be there as long as you are
>> plugged into the Internet. If you lose your connect this will change.
>> If you don't connect automatically it won't be there or if something
>> is wrong it will have a X through it.
>>
>
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