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Jessica Olsen

A Support Guide for Wireless Diagnostics and Troubleshooting - 0 views

  • This article assumes knowledge of IEEE 802.11-based wireless LAN networking including related technologies such as IEEE 802.1X and Wi-Fi Protected Access (WPA™). This article is not meant to be a detailed explanation of the inner workings of the Windows Wireless Zero Configuration service. For basic knowledge of wireless networking, see the Windows Server 2003 Wireless Networking Web site
  • he first step to take for a wireless issue is to gather information that might be needed to perform a preliminary diagnosis, including the following:
  • Wireless logs. Logging can be enabled through the netsh ras set tracing * en command. After enabling logging, you can either restart the computer or restart the Wireless Zero Configuration (for Windows XP) or Wireless Configuration (for Windows Server 2003) service with the net stop wzcsvc and net start wzcsvc commands. The wireless logs are located in the systemroot\tracing folder. The log files most useful for troubleshooting wireless issues are the following:
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  • Symptom Diagnosis For the times that an immediate or trivial solution is not apparent, symptomatic analysis is best used to determine where you should look next. Symptoms and Solutions Table 1 lists common issues, causes, and likely solutions.
Jessica Olsen

Backup related repeated Warnings ID 51: An error was detected on - Microsoft Community - 0 views

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    "Hey!  I have had the same event errors as well.  I have been having trouble with the GUI operating properly in Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit PC.  I have tried everything.  I can't navigate in windows b/c when I click on something it just flashes and disappears, such as drop down menus and forget hitting like on Facebook.  I feel like I have tried everything to fix it.  I have a HP-G6 Pavilion 15 inch Display and it has been a good computer up til now.  It supposedly has an AMD64 tri-core processor.  I installed the drivers like the Lenovo website suggested for the drivers that didn't come pre-installed om my refurbished HP Laptop.  The graphics are really jumpy and when I log on or off, the screen goes black.  I think I have a bad driver.  To boot, my desktop has an Intel Pentium product in it and it was fine.  I had the laptop and the PC connected on the Home User Groups feature on windows 7 because it was very convenient for me to be able to access my files no matter which one I used.  Well I got hacked and my id stolen, so I had to change my network location to Public no matter what.  It doesn't allow Home Users Networks and my PC and my PC  does not use the wireless access point at all.  So I looked on my Lenovo's drivers store, as it started to act like the registry was corrupt, and I found out that my PC thought it had the AMID 64 tri-core processor.  It was installed apparently, over  some point and I think that's the reason I had to wipe my PC clean and Re-Install windows on it.  I think the network was so open that Windows Updates and hardware were confusedly traded by my machines.  So I found all the old AMD 64 files in my PC Desktop Windows Folder in the Driver Store.  Anyway,  I have tried everything to get my PC and Laptop healthy and the registry intact.  I generated a system health report and it said there is something wrong with ,y hard drives.  This afternoon, my USB ports on the front of the Desktop were
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