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homegroup problem
i tried to connect to a homegroup, with a win 7 HP to a win 7 pro, but it says it can't connect as it needs ipv6
whats the point in it at all then, as i believe most folk have ipv4
i tried to connect to a homegroup, with a win 7 HP to a win 7 pro, but it says it can't connect as it needs ipv6
whats the point in it at all then, as i believe most folk have ipv4
thanks rodger, i'll have a read of that
the 2 pc that i want to homegroup have win 7
If the registry fix doesn't do anything than most likely you have a problem with your router. A firmware update may fix it, I can also check the compatiblity with Windows 7 if you give me the exact model number and version number. That registry hack is only attempting to make up for not using a Windows 7 compatible router. It's a work around at best.
Last edited by chev65; 28 Dec 2009 at 13:18.
thanks chev65, the router i use is a netgear DG834GT, i'm on sky broadband (UK) and they have their own firmware for the router, not netgears, not upgradeable unless sky do it themself, part of there T&C. there away to put their prices up, so i'm just about to move over to O2 BB, so i'll try again after that
Hi bjproc,
I'm sure chev65 will be back soon but I took the liberty of running your router model - it's not listed at the Windows 7 Compatibility Center. What's the model of your network adapter? Is it built-in, or a USB stick?
Also, here's a thread from a few weeks ago in which someone's having problems with their Netgear DG834GT as well: Netgear Router DG834GT - Windows 7 driver
Cheers,
Walker
Windows Outreach Team
One thing I'd like to bring up is if the PC's are *ethernet* connected to the router vs wireless, then the driver issue is moot. There wouldn't be one for the router. The router isn't going to know anything about IPV6 anyway so any IPV6 packets would be ignored by it. You could throw *any* IPV4 based router in there and it wouldn't make a difference. Wireless is a different story of course.
WalkerA has a good point: The ethernet NIC could be an issue and drivers are common problem.
One tip that I learned that has worked on almost every version of Windows when IP acts really weird is to uninstall the adapter and reboot. This causes Windows to "re-discover" the adapter a reinstall the driver and create new registry settings. This may not be it, but I'll throw it out for consideration...
i've disabled my wireless cards, and the router is connected with ethernet cables (a 25' one trailing through the house just now, maybe get it put under the floor tomorrow )
it's still not having this homegroup problem
the hard wire has fixed my streaming problems
Sounds like a wireless adapter issue. If you can provide the details on the adapter that would be a great start.