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Jelster
05-02-07, 02:20 PM
I'm have maging problems with the Internet today. I work in a "Regus" serviced office, they provide the IP connection. I can reach sites that I use regularly (therefore I will have a record of their location) but sites I have never visited, or visit very infrequently, are coming back with a "page not found" error.

At a guess, but not being a proper techie, I would say it was a DNS issue, so how can I stop it happening ??

.

Baph
05-02-07, 02:33 PM
The DNS server won't be returning an authorative answer.

Talk to your internet supplier about their DNS servers, and which you can add. Then post back here if you're still having problems. I have a LONG list of DNS servers :)

SoulKiss
05-02-07, 02:34 PM
Call the office manager.

Nothing you can do personally (short of running your own DNS server - and as you say - you are not a techie :P )

David

Jelster
05-02-07, 04:16 PM
Call the office manager.

Nothing you can do personally (short of running your own DNS server - and as you say - you are not a techie :P )

David

Have you ever worked in a Regus office ??? Asking a technical question like that is like asking somebody in PC World to explain what a broadband connection is :roll:

I notice that when I run IPconfig, I don't get a DNS server, just IP Address, default gateway and subnet info. I'm not sure that modifying my network properties and allocating a fixed DNS address will actually do anything, as it's all relative to the connection I'm sitting on.

.

wyntrblue
05-02-07, 04:28 PM
to get full information about your network settings for a card try

ipconfig /all

that will give you more info than a normal ipconfig

TEC
05-02-07, 05:21 PM
Have you ever worked in a Regus office ???
Nope but I have had dealings with them :roll:

Asking a technical question like that is like asking somebody in PC World to explain what a broadband connection is :roll:
That is being very polite ;)

I'm not sure that modifying my network properties and allocating a fixed DNS address will actually do anything
Probably wont, I have known the ISP that they use have DNS problems but its their problem, not yours. If you are paying for the service then they should fix it. If your company is paying them for the web access then your company should be beating them with a stick (a big one) as what they charge aint cheap :shock: Was why we got our own ADSL put in their offices that we use :)

SoulKiss
05-02-07, 05:59 PM
Have you ever worked in a Regus office ??? Asking a technical question like that is like asking somebody in PC World to explain what a broadband connection is :roll:


No, but I did used to be the guy who got to fix it when Regus called it in...... (if it was serious enough)

4 years 3rd Line support for C&W in the Internet Team (not what it was called internally but close enough)

:)