I wonder if there is a virus on the system that targets IP addressing.
Can you go to a restore point when the computer was working, say 1 month ago?
Can you go to a restore point when the computer was working, say 1 month ago?
Quote from mgookin:
Went and got two NIC cards.
Install new nic and device manager sees it fine, good driver, blah blah blah
Connect ethernet cable and no connectivity. Open Control Panel and tell it to Repair the Connection. Message "Windows could not finsih repairing the problem because the follwing action cannot be completed: Renewing your IP address" Same message I have been getting for 2 days.
What in a pc has to do with this other then NIC?
USB WiFi does not work
Onboard mobo Ethernet does not work
10/100 NIC does not work.
Yet device manager has no problems with any of these items.
Yet I can take the ethernet cable and stick it in the ethernet port on this laptop and it works fine.
Anyone know what to do here?
Quote from mgookin:
Does anyone know where I can download a scanner with current updates that I can jump drive or burn to cd and take to that pc? I can't use a scanner that will need to look for updates on install because it can't connect.
Quote from Hook N. Sinker:
You might take the hard drive from the suspect computer and put it into a known good system in place of the CD drive. Make sure the known good system has antivirus software. Then if you start the computer the suspect drive appears as a second drive and you can virus scan the suspect drive.
You might also look through the programs, and look at add/remove programs. Check to see if there are any unexpected programs installed. Sometimes people install software that causes problems.
Quote from mgookin:
I already went through Add/ Remove when I uninstalled all the AOL chat crap and that stuff. The computer did formerly have Kazaa on it so it very well could be infected.
Before I put that HDD in another pc I'll do an image of the C: drive in the good pc before I connect it just in case a virus comes off of the drive being scanned.