andrewstevens556
Bronze Level Poster
Fingers crossed....!
What other devices do you have connected to that router?
Nothing else seems to have much issue. The W10 laptop sometimes starts with that globe for 10s after waking from sleep, but it soon changes to a proper wifi symbol.Do any of those have problems?
Not as far as I'm aware.Did any new device connect just before you lost your connection?
No static IP addresses set at all.Do any devices have a static IP address coded?
You'll find that windows 10 will often change the wifi symbol between the globe which signifies no connection, and even sometimes a LAN connector symbol. This is just a bug within windows 10 network settings and hopefully doesn't actually signify any issue with connection.Latest update: Never really had a problem in the last week or so.
That's good enough for me. Thank you very much all.
I'm glad you're happy - but I wouldn't be. Problems never fix themselves so if it's working now it's because this is an intermittent problem and things are good at the moment.Latest update: Never really had a problem in the last week or so.
That's good enough for me. Thank you very much all.
Try setting static DNS. Windows 10 uses this to determine if it's got internet connectivity.
There are lots of reports of strange behaviour on many Windows 10 devices when waking from sleep. TBH, apart from a small and hardly significant power saving, I don't see any point in sleeping (or hibernating) a desktop. I never do, my PC is on 24x7. To me, sleep and hibernation are laptop power-saving tools and have no logical place on a desktop.Happened again today when waking from sleep. It does seem very strange. Hard to put any logic to it.
Thanks for the link @SpyderTracks - if that relates to the issue I have then there may be some light at the end of the tunnel.