I screwed over the registry and wifi stopped working- help a newb out?

10ftcoke

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I was playing around with the registry deleting what I though to be useless stuff and being the silly man I am, I somehow disabled the wifi. I did not backup my registry and I have no system restores to return to because I disabled that service.

I can connect to a router on windows 7 wifi in that the router will detect an incorrect network password, but it always says limited access under the wifi icon. I cannot log in to the router to change the router's settings when i put 192.168.1.1 in a web browser. Otherwise there is no wifi functionality

I know this problem is isolated to my windows os because when i boot on ubuntu (which I am on now) I can get wifi.
I tried reinstalling the wifi card but that did not work.

Any ideas what I should try next?

I still have my windows 7 disc but my disc drive broke like 8 months ago... I'm probably going to have to end up buying another one

If I system repair from the windows disc, will it still preserve my files and installations?

Is there some easier way to fix this, like is there a default registry file out there that I can just download and run in windows 7 to restore my registry to defaults?

Oh and I was also deleting a bunch of tasks off the windows task scheduler as well. I don't think deleting a task would disable the wifi but I don't know.

Thanks for reading this far.
 

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Here's what I got

> sfc /scannow

...

Verification 100% complete
Windows resource protection did not find any integrity violations
 

My Computer My Computer

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windows 7 ultimate 32 bit
OS
windows 7 ultimate 32 bit

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

win 7 ultimate32bit, Win8.1pro wmc 32bitamd phenom x4 9600corsair twinxs 2x2gb2x nvidia 1gb 8500gt
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
self build
OS
win 7 ultimate32bit, Win8.1pro wmc 32bit
CPU
amd phenom x4 9600
Motherboard
asus m2n32-sli deluxe
Memory
corsair twinxs 2x2gb
Graphics Card(s)
2x nvidia 1gb 8500gt
Sound Card
onboard
Monitor(s) Displays
23" PB Viseo 233d
Screen Resolution
1920x1080
Hard Drives
maxtor sata 500gb
maxtor sata 320gb
fujitsu sata200gb
PSU
oryxx tornado 750w
Case
thermaltake xaser lll
Cooling
artic freezer64 pro + 7 case fans
I was playing around with the registry deleting what I though to be useless stuff and being the silly man I am, I somehow disabled the wifi. I did not backup my registry and I have no system restores to return to because I disabled that service.
What made you think anything mentioned above was a good idea?

Your best bet in my opinion is to do a repair install. You can google "Windows 7 ISO digital river download" to find a legal download of the ISO so that you can do the repair install from a USB flash drive rather than a the install disc. It will take some work but will be cheaper than going out and buying a DVD-ROM drive. Note that if you have SP1 installed and the ISO is not SP1 then you cannot do the repair install. Hopefully the tutorials linked below can help.

http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/3413-repair-install.html
http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorial...ows-7-sp1-into-installation-dvd-iso-file.html ( not sure if you will need this. If the ISO already contains SP1 use the next link)
http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/31541-windows-7-usb-dvd-download-tool.html

For future reference, the registry in Windows 7 does not need any "cleaning" or "optimizing." In fact, no version of Windows after ME has anything to gain from altering the registry. Also, unless you have less than 10GB of free HDD space, only problems like this is to come from turning off System Restore. It's easier to list the number of problems that CAN'T be fixed with System Restore than the millions that can.
 

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I am in 100% agreement with Petey.

Follow his advice.

If I were to say how strongly I agree with his advice, the powers that be would want to chastise me,once again.
 

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Also have an Asus ha1002xp netbook with Win 7 Ultimate installed.
I was playing around with the registry deleting what I though to be useless stuff and being the silly man I am, I somehow disabled the wifi. I did not backup my registry and I have no system restores to return to because I disabled that service.

I can connect to a router on windows 7 wifi in that the router will detect an incorrect network password, but it always says limited access under the wifi icon. I cannot log in to the router to change the router's settings when i put 192.168.1.1 in a web browser. Otherwise there is no wifi functionality

I know this problem is isolated to my windows os because when i boot on ubuntu (which I am on now) I can get wifi.
I tried reinstalling the wifi card but that did not work.

Any ideas what I should try next?

I still have my windows 7 disc but my disc drive broke like 8 months ago... I'm probably going to have to end up buying another one

If I system repair from the windows disc, will it still preserve my files and installations?

Is there some easier way to fix this, like is there a default registry file out there that I can just download and run in windows 7 to restore my registry to defaults?

Oh and I was also deleting a bunch of tasks off the windows task scheduler as well. I don't think deleting a task would disable the wifi but I don't know.

Thanks for reading this far.

Hello!

I don't suppose you have any idea of which keys you deleted network data from? Were you clearing out services (HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\System\CurrentControlSet\Services)? Or were you elsewhere?

HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Internet Explorer
HKCU\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Internet Settings

^These are the common settings keys, but I believe that you couldn't do this much damage with just these keys...

HKLM\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Svchost - netsvcs
HKLM\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\LSA

Any of the other thousands of locations. Any ideas? Hive? Sub-hive? Key? Value name? Data you changed (I may recognise something).

I mentioned those keys, because they are very common, and I might be able to fix them. If you can't remember, then it is unfixable. Repair install.

Richard
 

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Repair Install will not work with SP slipstreamed into ISO, you'll need the latest Win7 with SP1 installer.

While you can run the extracted files, I would instead write the ISO to bootable flash stick to have rescue capability from boot in case the problems you brought on by deliberately ruining your OS cause the Repair Install to fail or it is not successful. In that case I'd follow these steps to get a perfect reinstall and setup, get a Win7 backup image to use if you decide to ruin your install again: Reinstalling Windows 7

Write ISO to flash stick using Universal USB Installer with Win7 in dropdown menu. Run Setup from stick to Repair Install.
 
I can't confirm whether or not the repair install will work with the method I discribed, but Greg is typically very knowledgable about such things, and he is right that a clean install is more likely to fix the problem. It's what I would do in your situation, but I thought a repair install would sound like a more reasonable task for you.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Professional SP1 64-bitIntel Core i5-2450M @2.5 GHz6 GB DDR3 1333MHzIntel HD 3000
Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Toshiba P775-S7100
OS
Windows 7 Professional SP1 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i5-2450M @2.5 GHz
Memory
6 GB DDR3 1333MHz
Graphics Card(s)
Intel HD 3000
Monitor(s) Displays
Built-in 17.3" LED; 22" Insignia NS-L22Q-10A
Screen Resolution
1600x900; 1360x768
Hard Drives
750 GB Hitachi
1TB Seagate FreeAgent External
Internet Speed
Verizon DSL Speed(Down/Up): 3360 Kbps / 800 Kbps
Antivirus
MSE and MBAM Pro
Browser
IE10
Am not saying Repair Install won't work, only that it cannot have SP1 slipstreamed into installer and still work.

The solution is to uninstall SP1 or, better yet, get a Win7 installer with SP1 to run the Repair install.

My point also is to burn the Win7 with SP1 ISO to bootable DVD or stick so you have rescue ability if Repair should fail as it can.
 
Last edited:
Hence why I said "with the method I described." Point is, it seems like we are in agreement that a repair or clean install are the only viable solutions at this point.
 

My Computer My Computer

At a glance

Windows 7 Professional SP1 64-bitIntel Core i5-2450M @2.5 GHz6 GB DDR3 1333MHzIntel HD 3000
Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Toshiba P775-S7100
OS
Windows 7 Professional SP1 64-bit
CPU
Intel Core i5-2450M @2.5 GHz
Memory
6 GB DDR3 1333MHz
Graphics Card(s)
Intel HD 3000
Monitor(s) Displays
Built-in 17.3" LED; 22" Insignia NS-L22Q-10A
Screen Resolution
1600x900; 1360x768
Hard Drives
750 GB Hitachi
1TB Seagate FreeAgent External
Internet Speed
Verizon DSL Speed(Down/Up): 3360 Kbps / 800 Kbps
Antivirus
MSE and MBAM Pro
Browser
IE10
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