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Slow or locked internet with win 7 Hello! I get a problem with either explorer 6 or google chrome, or even livemail: very often, the system seems awaiting for some answer, and doesn't succeed to reach the goal; but if I shutdown or enven go to hibernate, after restart, it works well (for a few moments). I tried "WinSockrepair" but still the same. I don't find anything related on the net... Any ideas? |
Re: Slow or locked internet with win 7 ?Upgrade to IE 8. -- Ron P Too soon old Too late smart "Jean Claude" <ejcv@free.fr> wrote in message news:4ca99f86$0$8073$426a74cc@news.free.fr... > Hello! > > I get a problem with either explorer 6 or google chrome, or even livemail: > > very often, the system seems awaiting for some answer, and doesn't succeed > to reach the goal; but if I shutdown or enven go to hibernate, after > restart, it works well (for a few moments). > > I tried "WinSockrepair" but still the same. > > I don't find anything related on the net... Any ideas? |
Re: Slow or locked internet with win 7 "Jean Claude" <ejcv@free.fr> wrote in message news:4ca99f86$0$8073$426a74cc@news.free.fr... > Hello! > > I get a problem with either explorer 6 or google chrome, or even livemail: > > very often, the system seems awaiting for some answer, and doesn't succeed > to reach the goal; but if I shutdown or enven go to hibernate, after > restart, it works well (for a few moments). > > I tried "WinSockrepair" but still the same. > > I don't find anything related on the net... Any ideas? > I had a similar effect when I got a new Netgear modem/router. On the basic setup page there was a setting - 'Idle Timeout (in minutes)' that was set to 3 minutes or something silly like that. Maybe you have a similar setting somewhere. |
Re: Slow or locked internet with win 7 Dave-UK wrote: > Jean Claude wrote ... >> >> I get a problem with either explorer 6 or google chrome, or even >> livemail: >> >> very often, the system seems awaiting for some answer, and doesn't >> succeed to reach the goal; but if I shutdown or enven go to >> hibernate, after restart, it works well (for a few moments). I tried >> "WinSockrepair" but still the same. > > I had a similar effect when I got a new Netgear modem/router. On the > basic setup page there was a setting - 'Idle Timeout (in minutes)' > that was set to 3 minutes or something silly like that. Maybe you > have a similar setting somewhere. That would only apply if using PPPoE in the router because of using a DSL service. The OP didn't identify *how* (what protocol) he uses to connect to his ISP. If cable broadband then there is no keep-alive option as it doesn't apply. The OP gave no information on just WHAT is his network. Nothing about what protocols are used, what devices are used, or anything about his network. A simple test (if he has a router) is to simply see if he can connect to the router's own web server (typically by browsing to http://192.168.1.1). If that works then the networking on his host is working and it's a problem on the WAN-side of his router. So when the problem appears but before shutting down, see if connecting to the router's web server still works. Of course, it is assumed the OP has already scanned his host using anti-virus/malware software (and preferrably more than just one program to overlap the detection coverage). |
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