What?! This is a joke right? Of course it is! Ha-Ha! Get your computer to recognize the qualities of a good man. lol That is a good one and if you ever figure it out, be sure to bottle it and you will be rich! lol
Now, it sounds like you are having some connection trouble here, try rerunning your Network Connection Setup Wizard and see if that resolves your issue. If it is an issue of continual disconnects from your network or connection, first, you can temorarily fix it by right clicking on the computer icon in the notification area, then click on Repair, and your system will go through the steps of disabling, then enabling your connection which will get you connected once again, if just untill it occurres again.
For a real fix you will need to contact the tech department of your Network adapter, whether it is wired or wireless and see about updating the driver(s). Now, make sure you set a Restore Point before updating ANY driver as this is the number one cause of BSD-Blue Screen of Death, which is a crash. If that occurres you simply will need to reboot into safe mode by pressing F8 a few times right after your manufactures logo, and then if you go into the Windows Boot, just shut down and try again untill you come to a black screen with white words. That is the DOS window with your Safe Mode options, then select either Safe Mode or Safe Mode with Networking by using the up/down arrows on your keyboard. Once you have the one you want highlighted, hit Enter. Don't be alarmed by the numbers and letters running quickly down your screen, those are simply the minimal drivers and programs loading into safe mode. Once you are at the safe mode welcome screen simply click on Administrator, supply the password if you set one at setup when you first bought the computer, usually it is blank, and the desktop for safe mode will laod. It will look different, with the words Safe Mode at each corner, will have a black background.
Once you are there, you can do one of two things, if even needed. First you can go into Device Manager, by clicking Start-Control Panel-then double click System. A dialog box with several tabs opens. Click on the Hardware tab, and on that tab then click Device Manager. In Device Manager, find the Network Adapters in the list, click the + to open it, then double click the adapter name you updated the driver on, and then click the Driver tab, then click Rollback Driver.
Or, you can do a System Restore to the Restore Point you set before the driver update process by Clicking Start-All Programs-Accessories-System Tool, then clicking on System Restore. Once inside System Restore select the Restore Point you set, or if you failed to do so, go to a preset point to a time prior to the driver update, select it and then follow the onscreen instructions, it is not difficult. Once you are done, reboot the system and see if all is well. If so, then go back to the manufacturers website and request a different driver and do the process over again. You could probably get the tech department to talk you through this too.
If you feel to uncomfortable with your computer skills, and there is no shame in that, then take the computer to a computer repair/maintainance shop and have them preform this fix for you. It is far more costly, but it is worth the peace of mind. Don't take it to a big box computer store like BestBuy or CompUSA as they just don't have the motivation to do as good of a job as a smaller repair shop. It is best to go to a store like The Geek Squad or a simular ilk.
Good luck and a very nice day to you too.
2007-01-08 10:34:00
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answer #1
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answered by Serenity 7
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