To my knowledge, Windows wasn't installed recently, but had not been updated in a while.
See ipconfig (below).
If there were a corrupted or missing driver, I would still expect Device Manager to show an 'Unknown device". But, strangely, there's nothing. System Information Viewer didn't see the wired adapter either, but the Dell Diagnostics does see it.
Anyway, we have bypassed the issue by using the Wireless connection, so unless somebody comes up with an idea, I guess I'll close the thread.
Unless you're in a work environment, you have too many DNS Servers listed.
Start, control panel, network connections, right click on the network adapter, left click properties. Look for Internet Protocol(TCP/IP). Click on Internet Protocol(TCP/IP) click on properties. Have your settings match mine.
PudgyOne
9 Legend
•
30.3K Posts
0
May 4th, 2014 15:00
maury11215,
Did you recently install/reinstall the operating system?
Can you run an ipconfig /all log and post it back here.
Rick
maury11215
1 Rookie
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19 Posts
0
May 4th, 2014 23:00
To my knowledge, Windows wasn't installed recently, but had not been updated in a while.
See ipconfig (below).
If there were a corrupted or missing driver, I would still expect Device Manager to show an 'Unknown device". But, strangely, there's nothing. System Information Viewer didn't see the wired adapter either, but the Dell Diagnostics does see it.
Anyway, we have bypassed the issue by using the Wireless connection, so unless somebody comes up with an idea, I guess I'll close the thread.
PudgyOne
9 Legend
•
30.3K Posts
0
May 6th, 2014 03:00
maury11215,
Unless you're in a work environment, you have too many DNS Servers listed.
Start, control panel, network connections, right click on the network adapter, left click properties. Look for Internet Protocol(TCP/IP). Click on Internet Protocol(TCP/IP) click on properties. Have your settings match mine.
Rick