This issue is both a (sort-of) fun puzzle and annoying. I'll try to describe the layout so people don't waste their time on stuff not related.
I've developed a small network of two Win7 machines, both HP250 laptops, and a Raspberry Pi4. Pi4 was the most recent addition, running on a version of Linux.
Both Win7 machines have been networked for several years. In my mind, there is the "main" machine and a "backup", but this is only determined by room geography. In fact, both are close to twins. I had to restore the 2nd machine, the "backup" a few months ago since I came close to losing it in a severe electrical storm in the middle of a complex report tightly deadlined.
That near death decided me to use a cheap Pi4 as belts 'n braces. Once stable, my plan was to simply update email, reports, spreadsheets, maps etc perhaps per fortnight. After fiddling with various Linux setups, I had all three machines freely talking to each other. A sync programme allowed me to update email etc on the two "remote" machines, including little Pi, from the "main" Win7 machine.
So ? The issue bugging me now is that the "main " Win7 has increasingly refused to see Raspberrypi on the network, even though both can ping each other, I can sync email etc from the Win7 to Pi, and run a Pi terminal screen remotely in Win7. So "main" Win7 knows Pi is there - and as of yesterday, recognised it on the network - but today for no reason I can understand, when both machines were booted, "main" Win7 cannot see Pi on the network. Refreshing 100 times doesn't do it.
And the hair-tearer ? Win7 "backup" sees Pi perfectly and instantly on the network. Pinging, syncing etc from Win7 "backup" is fine too. Both Win7's have the same wifi card (AC3165). All three machines have stable DHCP IP addresses in the router table.
Win7 "main" recognised Pi as an object on the network until today, when it stubbornly refuses. Win7 "backup" sees Pi instantly. All three machines can ping each other. Both Win7's can run a Pi terminal screen remotely.
Suggestions please ?
I've developed a small network of two Win7 machines, both HP250 laptops, and a Raspberry Pi4. Pi4 was the most recent addition, running on a version of Linux.
Both Win7 machines have been networked for several years. In my mind, there is the "main" machine and a "backup", but this is only determined by room geography. In fact, both are close to twins. I had to restore the 2nd machine, the "backup" a few months ago since I came close to losing it in a severe electrical storm in the middle of a complex report tightly deadlined.
That near death decided me to use a cheap Pi4 as belts 'n braces. Once stable, my plan was to simply update email, reports, spreadsheets, maps etc perhaps per fortnight. After fiddling with various Linux setups, I had all three machines freely talking to each other. A sync programme allowed me to update email etc on the two "remote" machines, including little Pi, from the "main" Win7 machine.
So ? The issue bugging me now is that the "main " Win7 has increasingly refused to see Raspberrypi on the network, even though both can ping each other, I can sync email etc from the Win7 to Pi, and run a Pi terminal screen remotely in Win7. So "main" Win7 knows Pi is there - and as of yesterday, recognised it on the network - but today for no reason I can understand, when both machines were booted, "main" Win7 cannot see Pi on the network. Refreshing 100 times doesn't do it.
And the hair-tearer ? Win7 "backup" sees Pi perfectly and instantly on the network. Pinging, syncing etc from Win7 "backup" is fine too. Both Win7's have the same wifi card (AC3165). All three machines have stable DHCP IP addresses in the router table.
Win7 "main" recognised Pi as an object on the network until today, when it stubbornly refuses. Win7 "backup" sees Pi instantly. All three machines can ping each other. Both Win7's can run a Pi terminal screen remotely.
Suggestions please ?
My Computer
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- HP 250 G7
- OS
- Windows 7 Pro x64
- CPU
- Intel i5-8265U
- Motherboard
- Intel Coffee Lake
- Memory
- 8gb
- Graphics Card(s)
- Intel Iris Plus 655
- Sound Card
- Realtek HDA
- Monitor(s) Displays
- Generic
- Screen Resolution
- 1366 x 768
- Hard Drives
- Crucial P5 NVMe 1Tb internal
WD's 4Tb, 3Tb, 2 x 2Tb external
- Mouse
- Logi wireless
- Internet Speed
- 45 Mbps
- Antivirus
- AVG
- Browser
- Firefox 88, Pale Moon 29, Brave 129
- Other Info
- Combination of i5-8265U with Crucial P5 achieves Crystal Bench scores > 5000
Iris Plus GPU (Whiskey Lake) driver from BioStar
HP 250 G7 is a budget machine