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#21
Barman58
You are a genius! I reset my router and I can access all my sites again.
You have restored what little sanity I have left.
Mark
Barman58
You are a genius! I reset my router and I can access all my sites again.
You have restored what little sanity I have left.
Mark
OK.
go to Control Panel\Network and Internet\Network Connections, select the network adaptor you are connecting by, select the IPv4 option and set the DNS servers to the following
Primary 208.67.222.222
Secondary 208.67.220.220
reboot and try to access the sites
Edit OK ignore this next step
Barman58: Perhaps you can help explain a problem I had for the first time yesterday, but solved it with a combination of a router and 16-port-switch power-off reset (and coincidentally waiting to see if the lost websites came back a few hours later). Very strangely these 4 websites would not come up via my normal Covad T1 connection on any networked computer: microsoft.com, hotmail.com, msn.com, and Windows Update (url hidden by the app). Not even on the pc that overides the router's DNS choices with its own. They came up fine on a computer when it was using Sprint instead of the network. All other websites worked via the network but I couldn't remember any other Microsoft domain names to try. All that a ping test would tell me is that they have different ip addresses from each other since none of them were (or are now) responding to pings.
Last edited by WindowsStar; 31 Aug 2010 at 09:37. Reason: typo
Thanks, i didn't know that. Speaking of changing DNS servers, GRC has a tiny app that tests numerous public servers to help you decide which ones to use: GRC's*|*DNS Nameserver Performance Benchmark**
Mr. Gibson, has been a long time friend, from back in the DOS days. We have lost touch over the years but I still use his web site for testing. Thanks for the reminder. :) :)