![]() "Religion, n. A daughter of Hope and Fear, explaining to Ignorance the nature of the Unknowable." ~ AMBROSE BIERCE (1842-1914) |
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![]() 7 has a firewall built in. It also blocks things depending on whether it thinks you are on a Public network or not. Unfortunately, there are so many variations on this theme that it's hard to tell what you can do to fix it. Check: Start -> Control Panel -> Network and Sharing Center. If it says "Public" then you'll likely have no internet access. Start -> Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Event Viewer and browse through the various Windows Logs and similar things in the left panel. Maybe it'll give you an indication of the errors and what is causing it. Can you browse sites using the IP addresses in the browser address bar? I assume not, but that might be another thing worth checking. E.g. http://74.125.228.20 is www.google.com (here, anyway) Good luck. Cheers, Scott. |
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![]() AFAIK, Firefox uses the underlying OS resolver, so it should work if nslookup works. Chrome has a built-in resolver, so all bets are off there. Start a clean Firefox profile and see if you can get anywhere with it. (Run firefox.exe -p to bring up the profile manager.) Unless you have file sharing totally disabled, see what happens when you run "net show \\other_computername" from each PC. (Substitute the name of the target PC for other_computername.) I'd expect to see at least an empty list, or an $IPC share, not an error. |
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![]() It's not just firefox. Outlook is down. Chrome is down. The VM I'm using is the only way I can reach the outside world. "Religion, n. A daughter of Hope and Fear, explaining to Ignorance the nature of the Unknowable." ~ AMBROSE BIERCE (1842-1914) |
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![]() There are numerous... Windows thingers that do that. -- greg@gregfolkert.net "No snowflake in an avalanche ever feels responsible." --Stanislaw Jerzy Lec |