I've tried accessing proxies to see if that would effect it, and it hasn't. I can access Google and its search pages and any of its cached pages, but nothing it links to directly unless I could anyway. I've been seeing what I can access and what I can't, though, and can give a little more information on that. I've also unplugged and replugged the wireless box, rebooted, turned off and turned on, uninstalled and reinstalled one or two things. Have you done the Repair operation for the affected computers' network connection? Splintercellguy 04:58, (UTC) Reply Yeah, many times. Does that answer the question? 76.185.113.55 04:30, (UTC) Reply Hmm, I may have gotten off-track with the router. We've got cable DSL through I believe Time Warner. WRT54G, with the in-package setup CD, labelled Setup Wizard ver. I'm not sure what DHCP is, or whether I have it installed or not, but if it helps we've got a LinkSys router, Model No. (My sisters set it up before I got here, I can ask them tomorrow.) The default password in the manual didn't work, so they must have come up with a new one. I got the IP, but I don't know the username or password. What have you installed recently? Splintercellguy 04:08, (UTC) Reply Open up a web browser, and type You may be asked for user and pass, consult your router's manual. Type ipconfig, and look at the Default Gateway field. By "networking problem", what do you mean? Is it something we could diagnose? If so, is it something we could fix? 76.185.113.55 00:46, (UTC) Reply Hmm, can you access the router configuration and see the DHCP information? Can you trying tracert-ing and see what you can get? Splintercellguy 02:39, (UTC) Reply I can sure try. They all found minor invasions, as they always do, and got rid of them, but nothing's changed. Splintercellguy 00:32, (UTC) Reply We've run AdAware, SpyBot S&D, and AVG. 76.185.113.55 00:30, (UTC) Reply Have you tried running anti-virus, spyware? It might be a networking problem if tools are a negative for virus/spyware. Does this sound like a virus, or spyware, or some sort of hardware problem, or what? If it helps, we're running Windows (XP I believe). My sister's computer has started having the same problem. This includes my antivirus update systems, so they haven't received updates in a few days. It's fine with Wikipedia and Google, and can kinda handle YouTube and a few other random sites, but for most it gives the same response as if it wasn't online. It connects to the internet (wireless), but won't load most pages. I have an odd problem with my computer, started about a day ago. When the screen goes completely black, I assume your computer has literally just turned itself off? x42bn6 Talk Mess 18:06, (UTC) Reply Here is a link to a screenshot of her msconfig startup panel: Do any of these look particularly suspicious? Does anybody have any recommendations for how to remove this virus? Thanks! NIRVANA2764 00:16, (UTC) Reply Don't see any problems with that startup list. For the record, she is running Windows XP Media Center Edition Version 5.1 with SP2. The problem this is giving her is that when she starts up in regular mode, a few applications load as usual but after a few moments her screen goes completely black, no little blinky cursor or anything. She reports that CA Security 2007 found the virus once and then said it was gone. She's scanned her harddrive with CA Security 2007, CCleaner and AdAware. I am not speaking on my behalf but the behalf of my friend, who got the a trojan today called the harnig virus.
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