Re: Another Solution for 10 Minute Disconnects
Posted: Sun Sep 26, 2004 6:39 pm
i have the same problem, but the link http://192.168.1.1/ don't seem to work on my comp :/
Can you help me?
Can you help me?
This is the community forum for Ryzom.
https://bb.ryzom.com/
Eleo, you may have a different brand router? Not all routers use the same address - I'd check your docs, or if you're in XP, open up a console window (cmd.exe from Start > Run) and use the 'ipconfig' command. The address for your router will be in the 'Default Gateway' setting.eleo123 wrote:i have the same problem, but the link http://192.168.1.1/ don't seem to work on my comp :/
Can you help me?
Yes, that is what happens. If can post the model number of your router and the version of your linksys firmware that would be great.mrfed wrote:I think I might have this problem -- do people who experience this disconnect get the little "please wait" window and icon, which then won't go away? Now that I think back, it has been about every 10 minutes -- and I have a Linksys router .....
p.s. disable ssid broadcast is a worthless "security" thing anyways and it can be discovered with virtually zero effort... especially when compared to cracking a WEP key.linky linky linky
if you use the Microsoft Windows XP SP 1-based Wireless Zero Configuration service to manage your wireless (aka, the "built-in client"), you're probably running into a horrible bug that Microsoft calls "behavior by design." The gist of this is as follows: if your wireless network is set to not broadcast your SSID, Microsoft's wireless manager will periodically drop your non-broadcasting WiFi connection in response to the presence of a broadcasting SSID-based network. You won't fully associate with that network, but the service will pop-up and tell you that there are multiple wireless networks to join, even if you have removed all other networks from your preferred settings (this contradicts Microsoft's report, which says it only affects preferred networks). The upshot of this is that you, the user who changes his default SSID and then sets it to not broadcast (as most security guides, and most hardware setup guides will tell you to do), now gets dropped off your network when you neighbor shows up with his new D-Link wireless router and not only fails to change the SSID from default to something else, but does not turn off broadcasting, either. While many may debate the security benefits of disabling SSID broadcast, it is a practice that is recommended by most manufacturers of wireless products.
blaze109 wrote:Yes, that is what happens. If can post the model number of your router and the version of your linksys firmware that would be great.
I just thought I'd let you all know that occasionally I'm still getting disconnected after 10 minutes even after this fix. It seems to work one night and then not the next. It is working more often than not so that's still good.mrfed wrote:Well, I'm at work now and forgot to write down the model number of my Linksys router -- but I updatd to the latest firmware last night and after that played for about 2 hours with no further problems.
ciara00 wrote:Eleo, you may have a different brand router? Not all routers use the same address - I'd check your docs, or if you're in XP, open up a console window (cmd.exe from Start > Run) and use the 'ipconfig' command. The address for your router will be in the 'Default Gateway' setting.
I -am- having a curious problem related to this now, myself. I set up port triggering to work with Ryzom, and it works beautifully... with my first character slot. All of my other character slots do the same thing as before - disconnecting after 5-10 minutes of play! Anybody have any clues on -this- one? ^.^