One Response. I do NOT have a wireless password ,and, never had one. Leave a Reply Cancel reply. But I finally came upon the solution. In Windows 7, it appears that in most cases you are no longer forced to choose between Windows and the manufacturer utility as the manager of your wireless connections.
Windows 7 seems generally fine with letting you configure things either way. The problem was, there was a profile saved in the manufacturer utility, a profile for the old network. And each time Windows restarted, the manufacturer utility was reinstituting its saved profile settings, wiping out the new settings. But at first, I had no idea where those old settings were coming from. Discussion in this Microsoft Answers thread got me looking at my Intellinet utility, and once I found and removed the old profile from there and, for good measure, went ahead and created a new profile for the new network , the settings have held with no problem.
So I was trying to get rid of the connections that are not used. That should not be the problem, but I am trying to find what the real problem is. So I thought it may be trying to connect to one of these. So Im guessing that I am going to have to get into the registry to clean up things. Dont like doing that unless I have to. Office Office Exchange Server. Not an IT pro? Windows Client. Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads.
Remove From My Forums. Select the Wi-Fi profile you want to delete then select Forget. Click the Start button in the bottom left corner of the screen. Type "network and" and select Network and Sharing Center from the search result. Select Manage wireless networks Select the Wi-Fi profile you want to delete then select the Remove button. Note You need to select a profile first in order to see the Remove button. Discontinued Products. Show all Show less.
0コメント