![]() I should have know better than to do ANY debugging with virus protection installed, but I am glad I had it installed because someone sent me a virus yesterday, and it caught it. I deinstalled Norton and everything now works great! I was about to take the motherboard back thinking that it was a hardware problem. GREAT!! Why isn't there a technote on that on their site, and WHY are they shipping software that BREAKS the networking on their motherboard. Today, I got an Intel motherboard tech on the phone who told me that one of these program, Norton Anti-Virus, interferred with TCP. I just installed everything that came with the board. When I got this motherboard, it came with a CDROMfull of software. Well, I finally got it figured out, and I am kicking myself somewhat. ![]() * RE: Can't Ping LocalHost, but can hit the Internet? DavidJoshua (IS/IT-Management) * end users are just like computers, some you can work with.others just need a simple reBOOTing to fix their problems. Try these and update your post, I would love to know the outcome of any of the above. Also make sure your computer name is correct, mine is C-4265 so I know it's local to my system. ![]() If you receive the above information that means that your system is resolving the LocalHost name correctly. If you do a TRACERT Localhost you should receive something like this as output.ġ <10 ms <10 ms <10 ms C-4265 You can try a "TRACERT Localhost" and see if for some reason the system is resolving localhost properly. Of course I've never had any issue with this before but I find it hard to think it's hardware related. The other thing I would do is apply the service pack before installing the above patch. The ping request will wait 1600 MS before timing out, you can adjust this as needed to increase the timeout, if it is the MTU size issue and the localhost is responding slow this should get you a reply at least.Ī quick look at the web site looks like they have a patch out for it, take a look at it and see if installing the patch helps. Try setting the timout yourself, you can use the timeout switch on the ping command. The TID goes on to say that data transfers using the loopback address are slow, I know you are having a problem pinging the local host but it may be that the ping hits the timeout before the localhost replies. I searched Microsoft's web site and found some information regarding some MTU size issues with Windows 2000. =david=- RE: Can't Ping LocalHost, but can hit the Internet? DavidJoshua (IS/IT-Management) Machine 1 can ping machines 2 and 3 (by IP address) and also get onto the Internet, but cannot ping itself or Localhost or map drives to anything or have its drives mapped.Ġx1. The machines 2 and 3 can ping Localhost and each other and get onto the Internet, and map drives to each other. Have 2 other machines on the network, an XP test machine (Machine2), and W2K Server (Machine3) test machine. To summarize, this is basically the equivalent of wanting to write every number 1 to 100, but instead of writing out every number individually, instead you write 1, 2, 3.LinkSys Router, DHCP Enabled and working. This two-colon replacement may only be applied once inĪn address, because multiple occurrences would create an ambiguous If you'd like screenshots, a guide from Microsoft can be found here: link.Īdditionally, you may also want to take a look at the Wikipedia Page for IPv6, specifically, Presentation: ![]()
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