After waking from hybernation no internet?

G

Guest

After my computer wakes from its sleep i lose connection to the internet and
my home network. The only way to get the internet back is to restart the
computer. Neone know an answer to this problem?

I have a Linksys Wireless G broadband router, but all my connections are
hardwire and not wireless and use a generic internet modem from charter comm.
 
G

Guest

I have the same problem as well but with wireless internet. I am able to
connect to only "certain" internet just after booting up the computer and
nothing after disconnection/waking up. In fact, Vista can't even detect
anything afterward.

Many of the internet connections avaiable are undetected or tag with a
comment saying that my wireless card isn't compatible. However, I have used
those network with this very same computer before with XP installed.

the computer I'm using is ACER tablet PC c110Ti with Vista(5472.5) installed.
The specs are Intel centrino 1GHz, 512 Mb ram, 64Mb shared videocard onboard
and the wireless card is g with backward compatible onboard as well. I hope
these info. are enough for troubleshooting. Please feel free to ask me for
more info. if needed

Thank you
MayP
 
G

Guest

I have the same problem also. I have a Belkin router, as like you, all
hardware and no software. In RC1 I had no problems connecting, although I had
to use my second LAN port rather than my first one.

In RC2 its a whole slew of problems, I have to continuously go back and
forth between 1 and 2 (yes, crawl on my hands and knees and reach into my
computer to change the plug. It keeps detecting everything as "Unidentified
Network" Although it has already been set up.

If anybody could help us out on this it would be great!
 
G

Guest

I'm having this same problem with Vista RTM, on a Dell laptop that had no
problems sleeping or hibernating. With Vista, after waking up from sleep or
hibernate it can't find my wireless network and the only fix I've found is to
reboot it. This makes sleep and hibernate pretty much useless features.
 
G

Guest

I'm chiming in to going the club on this one. I've got a Dell Latitude D620
with an Intel 3945abg adapter running Vista Ultimate RTM. The inability to
connect after waking up from sleep/hibernating is driving me nuts.
 
J

jimvernon2003

I'm chiming in to going the club on this one. I've got a Dell Latitude D620
with an Intel 3945abg adapter running Vista Ultimate RTM. The inability to
connect after waking up from sleep/hibernating is driving me nuts.

I'm having a similar issue on my new Gateway laptop. After coming
back from hibernation, my wireless card will not find any networks
until I reboot.
 
G

Guest

Have the same problem, running wpa encryption, I tried going for wep instead,
and
then the problem was gone, but still have no idea of what causes the problem
 
R

Robert L [MVP - Networking]

Try to re-set power save option on the NIC this post may help,

chicagotech.net :: View topic - Solved: intermittent connectionsA: The intermittent connections may cause by the faulty power save options on the NIC. To check that, open the NIC Properties>Configuration>Power Management ...
http://www.chicagotech.net/netforums/viewtopic.php?p=215&sid=8b6a8afc70d840687a6c766556f6c75f


Bob Lin, MS-MVP, MCSE & CNE
Networking, Internet, Routing, VPN Troubleshooting on http://www.ChicagoTech.net
How to Setup Windows, Network, VPN & Remote Access on http://www.HowToNetworking.com
I'm chiming in to going the club on this one. I've got a Dell Latitude D620
with an Intel 3945abg adapter running Vista Ultimate RTM. The inability to
connect after waking up from sleep/hibernating is driving me nuts.
 
G

Guest

Hi,

I'm having a similar problem with a new HP dv9208 laptop. The only reliable
solution that I've come up with is to disable the apapter before I put it
into hibernate and enable the adapter after the machine comes back up. I've
installed all the new drivers and turned off power saving etc.

Hope this is of help.
 
G

Guest

I have a similar problem with my Toshiba A105 Satellite. I seem to lose
connection coming out of standby. The wireless network reconnects. But is now
in local mode only with router. I try to repair it by renewing address but it
says it cannot fix. The only solution I found was to delete the wireless
connections and add the wireless network back in. Lot's of problems!! I think
I will go back to XP.
 
G

Guest

I did find a way around this that is a partial fix. I have set a scheduled
task to bring my system out of hibernation. The OS is Vista Home Premium on
an HP 1730. The first action of that task is to start Internet Explorer with
the Internet options set to 'always dial my connection.' I do not need or
want IE at this time but it does get the internet connection turned on. Then
a subsequent scheduled task goes to the Internet to download a file.

Windy George
 
G

Guest

From what I have seen this is an all-around issue with Vista, and it seems
Microsoft has shot themselves in the foot. I have been playing with a Sony
laptop with different PCMCIA network cards, and with a hard drive with XP on
it, it has not been a problem. When I put the Vista hard drive in, it can not
be resolved, and I have looked everywhere and tried everything, even locking
in the gateway information, switching the shutdown the card function on and
off, and trying ipconfig and repair utilities, but all to no avail. Time for
microsoft to pick up the pieces, and do a repair or complete rewrite of bad
system programming.
I wonder when they will finally agree that this is a real problem, and
figure out that as long as they do not fix the problems they created, it will
put more people off going to the new systems, and stay with the old ones.
 
G

Guest

DerickB said:
From what I have seen this is an all-around issue with Vista, and it seems
Microsoft has shot themselves in the foot. I have been playing with a Sony
laptop with different PCMCIA network cards, and with a hard drive with XP on
it, it has not been a problem. When I put the Vista hard drive in, it can not
be resolved, and I have looked everywhere and tried everything, even locking
in the gateway information, switching the shutdown the card function on and
off, and trying ipconfig and repair utilities, but all to no avail. Time for
microsoft to pick up the pieces, and do a repair or complete rewrite of bad
system programming.
I wonder when they will finally agree that this is a real problem, and
figure out that as long as they do not fix the problems they created, it will
put more people off going to the new systems, and stay with the old ones.

Hi All:

My problem was resolved some time ago and I did write a submission to this
group but I do not know where that answer might be. The basic problem was
that the power setting "Allow Windows to turn this device off to conserve
power" was not checked to allow Windows to turn off the device therefore
Windows would not turn on the device... AND ... a then recent update to the
Vista OS. The device is the NIC and the setting is that NIC under the device
manager, the power settings tab.

George
 
G

Guest

That may have worked for some of the people some of the time, but, alas, it
has not for me. And I switched my network card from Belkin Pre-N to the
latest Dlink N-Spec, and also my router from Pre-N to Dlink N-spec, but with
no noticeable difference. And some of the august updates did not do it for
me, no change in how it reacts. So, I still think it needs some major rewrite
to get this under control for most machines and environments. Maybe it is
time for the first Vista Service Pack, which may be the reason a lot of
people have not gone over to Vista yet, and I am considering putting the hard
drive with XP Pro back in the laptop again, the slowness of the system and
the problems encountered are not worth the aggrevation and time spent on
resolving problems.
 

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