hello all frustrated and frazzled Gracie here.
About a year ago we helped some friends set up an AOL Broadband network (we did try to persuade them to go for some other ISP, but as they were already using AOL, they preferred not to change).
All has been fine until the other day, when...there was Broadband to all four computers when the folks went out, but when they came back, there wasn't.
I actually did not take too much notice of this analysis because out of the four computers accessing Broadband, only the laptop is unchanged, and I am not sure that was ever properly configured anyway.
The computer that we originally used to set up the router and the broadband has recently been made redundant and a spiffy new XP machine has replaced it. The other two machines have been reformatted, and the last reformat was at about the same time as the Broadband went down, so I assumed that the configuration details were no longer present and that was why broadband was no longer accessible. Simply putting AOL back on - the router ( Thompson Speedtouch 500) was showing an amber light on internet connectivity- had
not fixed the problem, so we had been called in to see what we could do.
After an initial check to make sure all cards were seen and all the necessary protocols, file share and Microsoft client were present, and the workgroup name was the same, I ran the setup wizard just to make sure, but still no joy, so I called up AOL techy folks, and we eventually succeeded in getting the XP connected to the AOL server and the router was all green, e-mail and the web made available to the XP machine - but none of the others.
The guy on the other end of the phone seemed relieved when I said the rest was probably LAN configurations that needed
tweaking, so that was that and thank you for your help,byebye - only it wasn't, because I spent the rest of the afternoon trying everything I normally do to get a computer on the net ( but we have cable) and going over the same ground again and again to try and get the LAN up and running and the other two Windows 98 computers to see the router, and failed. There are no IP addresses for those ethernet cards. In our router at home ( LinkSys) I can go into a status page and renew the IP,look at what computers are on the network and what IP's they are assigned to, but with the SpeedTouch there doesn't seem to be anything user-configurable.
I eventually phoned AOL up again as I had run out of ideas, but, they said, they do not support networks running Windows 98 or ME.
Where do we go from here I wonder? I can't understand why ethernet cards that are recognised in DM, have all their protocols bound, etc, etc, are not being assigned IP addresses by the router - no subnetmask, nothing. I don't know enough about network configuration to know what to do next - except buy another router, but that one has all the greens now and the AOL icon at the bottom of the desktop thinks it is connected, but when I go into AOL it says it cannot connect to the DNS, and the IP config remains full of zeros for those two machines, yet the XP machine, running on the same network is recognised and active.
Any ideas please?
About a year ago we helped some friends set up an AOL Broadband network (we did try to persuade them to go for some other ISP, but as they were already using AOL, they preferred not to change).
All has been fine until the other day, when...there was Broadband to all four computers when the folks went out, but when they came back, there wasn't.
I actually did not take too much notice of this analysis because out of the four computers accessing Broadband, only the laptop is unchanged, and I am not sure that was ever properly configured anyway.
The computer that we originally used to set up the router and the broadband has recently been made redundant and a spiffy new XP machine has replaced it. The other two machines have been reformatted, and the last reformat was at about the same time as the Broadband went down, so I assumed that the configuration details were no longer present and that was why broadband was no longer accessible. Simply putting AOL back on - the router ( Thompson Speedtouch 500) was showing an amber light on internet connectivity- had
not fixed the problem, so we had been called in to see what we could do.
After an initial check to make sure all cards were seen and all the necessary protocols, file share and Microsoft client were present, and the workgroup name was the same, I ran the setup wizard just to make sure, but still no joy, so I called up AOL techy folks, and we eventually succeeded in getting the XP connected to the AOL server and the router was all green, e-mail and the web made available to the XP machine - but none of the others.
The guy on the other end of the phone seemed relieved when I said the rest was probably LAN configurations that needed
tweaking, so that was that and thank you for your help,byebye - only it wasn't, because I spent the rest of the afternoon trying everything I normally do to get a computer on the net ( but we have cable) and going over the same ground again and again to try and get the LAN up and running and the other two Windows 98 computers to see the router, and failed. There are no IP addresses for those ethernet cards. In our router at home ( LinkSys) I can go into a status page and renew the IP,look at what computers are on the network and what IP's they are assigned to, but with the SpeedTouch there doesn't seem to be anything user-configurable.
I eventually phoned AOL up again as I had run out of ideas, but, they said, they do not support networks running Windows 98 or ME.
Where do we go from here I wonder? I can't understand why ethernet cards that are recognised in DM, have all their protocols bound, etc, etc, are not being assigned IP addresses by the router - no subnetmask, nothing. I don't know enough about network configuration to know what to do next - except buy another router, but that one has all the greens now and the AOL icon at the bottom of the desktop thinks it is connected, but when I go into AOL it says it cannot connect to the DNS, and the IP config remains full of zeros for those two machines, yet the XP machine, running on the same network is recognised and active.
Any ideas please?