windows meeting space meeting

T

Tharinda

how i solve this problem?

'windows meeting space cannot create or join any meetings because you do not
have any enabled network adapter with valid IPv6 addresses nor a wireless
adapter capable of ad hoc mode'
 
J

Jeffrey Randow

Meeting Space uses the PNRP/IPV6 capability of Vista to setup meetings
without dealing with the problems that standard NAT (i.e.,
router-based) firewalls.

If you don't have either a valid IPV6 address (which is very likely
since native IPV6 addresses are very rare) or a tunnel-provided IPV6
address (which is what you should have), you won't be able to get this
to work.

Type in "ipconfig" in a command prompt and see what you get. Look
particularly at Local Area Connection 9 & 11 (at least on mine). Do
you have any IPV6 addresses listed there?
 
T

Tharinda

Jeffrey Randow said:
Meeting Space uses the PNRP/IPV6 capability of Vista to setup meetings
without dealing with the problems that standard NAT (i.e.,
router-based) firewalls.

If you don't have either a valid IPV6 address (which is very likely
since native IPV6 addresses are very rare) or a tunnel-provided IPV6
address (which is what you should have), you won't be able to get this
to work.

Type in "ipconfig" in a command prompt and see what you get. Look
particularly at Local Area Connection 9 & 11 (at least on mine). Do
you have any IPV6 addresses listed there?
---
Jeffrey Randow
(e-mail address removed)
Windows Networking MVP 2001-2006
http://www.networkblog.net


this is my result

<a href="http://img265.imageshack.us/my.php?image=captureab4.jpg"
target="_blank"><img
src="http://img265.imageshack.us/img265/7291/captureab4.th.jpg" border="0"
alt="Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us" /></a>

can u tell how to solve this?
 
T

Tharinda

Jeffrey Randow said:
Meeting Space uses the PNRP/IPV6 capability of Vista to setup meetings
without dealing with the problems that standard NAT (i.e.,
router-based) firewalls.

If you don't have either a valid IPV6 address (which is very likely
since native IPV6 addresses are very rare) or a tunnel-provided IPV6
address (which is what you should have), you won't be able to get this
to work.

Type in "ipconfig" in a command prompt and see what you get. Look
particularly at Local Area Connection 9 & 11 (at least on mine). Do
you have any IPV6 addresses listed there?
---
Jeffrey Randow
(e-mail address removed)
Windows Networking MVP 2001-2006
http://www.networkblog.net

this is result
<a href="http://img265.imageshack.us/my.php?image=captureab4.jpg"
target="_blank"><img
src="http://img265.imageshack.us/img265/7291/captureab4.th.jpg" border="0"
alt="Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us" /></a>
 

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