Taskbar hangs after network butchering

  • Thread starter Thread starter Mike
  • Start date Start date
M

Mike

After attending a LAN party, at which a "friend" set up
my network settings, I have had a strange problem at
home. When I start my computer, one taskbar item loads
instantly, but the rest do not load for over a minute,
and two of them do not load at all. If I try to
access "Workgroup Computers," the computer hangs for a
moment, then gives me an error message. However, if I
interrupt this with Ctrl Alt Del and force the window to
close, when windows explorer starts again, all the proper
icons are in the tray. Any suggestions? Thanks.
 
"Mike" said:
After attending a LAN party, at which a "friend" set up
my network settings, I have had a strange problem at
home. When I start my computer, one taskbar item loads
instantly, but the rest do not load for over a minute,
and two of them do not load at all. If I try to
access "Workgroup Computers," the computer hangs for a
moment, then gives me an error message. However, if I
interrupt this with Ctrl Alt Del and force the window to
close, when windows explorer starts again, all the proper
icons are in the tray. Any suggestions? Thanks.

Without knowing what settings got changed, it's hard to say what the
problem is. I'd use System Restore to go back in time to before you
attended the LAN party.
--
Best Wishes,
Steve Winograd, MS-MVP (Windows Networking)

Please post any reply as a follow-up message in the news group
for everyone to see. I'm sorry, but I don't answer questions
addressed directly to me in E-mail or news groups.

Microsoft Most Valuable Professional Program
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com
 
After attending a LAN party, at which a "friend" set up
my network settings, I have had a strange problem at
home. When I start my computer, one taskbar item loads
instantly, but the rest do not load for over a minute,
and two of them do not load at all. If I try to
access "Workgroup Computers," the computer hangs for a
moment, then gives me an error message. However, if I
interrupt this with Ctrl Alt Del and force the window to
close, when windows explorer starts again, all the proper
icons are in the tray. Any suggestions? Thanks.

Mike,

What are the taskbar items noted as problems? What is the error message? Any
additional errors noted in Event Viewer (Control Panel - Administrative Tools)?

Please provide ipconfig information for your computer (any others on your LAN,
for comparison?).
Start - Run - "cmd". Type "ipconfig /all >c:\ipconfig.txt" into the command
window - Open c:\ipconfig.txt in Notepad, copy and paste into your next post.
Identify operating system (by name and version) with each ipconfig listing.

Any problems actually using the internet, or your LAN? Since you don't state
any specifics, I'd suspect a spyware or viral infection from being on a LAN with
a lot of gamers (only one infected computer would be needed).

How current is your virus protection? Try one or more of these free online
virus scans, which should complement your current protection:
<http://www.bitdefender.com/scan/license.php>
<http://www.pandasoftware.com/activescan>
<http://www.ravantivirus.com/scan/>
<http://security.symantec.com/ssc/home.asp>
<http://housecall.trendmicro.com/housecall/start_corp.asp>

Now check for, and learn to defend against, additional problems - adware,
crapware, spyware.

Start by downloading each of the following additional free tools:
AdAware <http://www.lavasoftusa.com/>
CWShredder <http://www.majorgeeks.com/download4086.html>
HijackThis <http://www.majorgeeks.com/download.php?det=3155>
LSP-Fix and WinsockLSPFix <http://www.cexx.org/lspfix.htm>
Spybot S&D <http://www.safer-networking.org/index.php?page=download>
Stinger <http://us.mcafee.com/virusInfo/default.asp?id=stinger>

Create a separate folder for HijackThis, such as C:\HijackThis - copy the
downloaded file there. AdAware and Spybot S&D have install routines - run them.
The other downloaded programs can be copied into, and run from, any convenient
folder.

First, run Stinger. Have it remove any problems found.

Next, close all Internet Explorer and Outlook windows, and run CWShredder. Have
it fix all problems found.

Next, run AdAware. First update it ("Check for updates now"), configure for
full scan (<http://www.lavahelp.com/howto/fullscan/>), then scan. When scanning
finishes, select all problems found for removal, and hit Next again.

Next, run Spybot S&D. First update it ("Search for updates"), then run a scan
("Check for problems"). Trust Spybot, and delete everything ("Fix Problems")
that is displayed in Red.

Then, run HijackThis ("Scan"). Do NOT make any changes immediately. Save the
HJT Log.
<http://forums.spywareinfo.com/index.php?showtopic=227>

Finally, have your HJT log interpreted by experts at one or more of the
following security forums (and post it, or a link to your forum posts, here):
Aumha: <http://forum.aumha.org/index.php>
Net-Integration: <http://forums.net-integration.net/>
Spyware Info: <http://forums.spywareinfo.com/>
Spyware Warrior: <http://spywarewarrior.com/index.php>
Tom Coyote: <http://forums.tomcoyote.org/>

If removal of any spyware affects your ability to access the internet (some
spyware builds itself into the network software, and its removal may damage your
network), run LSP-Fix and / or WinsockXPFIx.

Cheers,
Chuck
Paranoia comes from experience - and is not necessarily a bad thing.
 

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