I already had my windows defender firewall restored to default. I have a question now though. I see. Then I have no idea what could be causing it. It just started happening out of nowhere. Can you test while using a VPN and see how things go?
If it disappears while on VPN, we know the problem is between your house and our servers. I have some hopes this may get us a bit more data. Edit: I got a lag spike and it showed a red plug icon while playing Overwatch, but it only lasted for a second and then it was fine.
Thank you for the additional tests, Blutz! With most VPNs they are shared, so the latency spike on the VPN was likely just due to too much data or the VPN connection being a bit more unstable due to the traffic.
Hey Caterpepi. The solution must be simple no registry edits so that disconnecting could be done by Users. A Universal Security Group is used to give access to the share.
Would the 'Password Protected Sharing Setting' apply in this instance? If so, where can I check to see whether or not it is enabled? I've looked at the Advanced Sharing Settings and I do not think this is the right place to look It is turned off.
This seems to control the sharing of public folders on one machine, not folders available through a network resource which is what we are dealing with here. Any help or links to other resources that have options other than those tested here would be much appreciated! I am not mapping the remote location to a drive letter. That is why I am solely working with connecting to the remote location using a UNC path as it is the easiest way to connect from a User's perspective.
The problem is that once someone connects with their credentials by giving the UNC Path in windows explorer, there is no way to disconnect knowing what I've tried so far without logging off. The 'net use' entry can be deleted but the remote location can still be accessed without prompting for credentials.
Credential Manager also shows no stored credentials. So, somewhere the credentials that were given to connect to the remote location via unc path are being stored somewhere and I cannot find a way to remove them without logging off.
And logging off is something that we don't want to do. This machine has a local account that a group of users interact with to run simulations via a piece of equipment connected to it. Since the simulation runs over the course of several hours, it needs to be accessible to this group of users without logoff or shutdown via the common local account. The data that this simulation produces needs to be uploaded to the remote location, but the remote location cannot be accessible to everyone so users in the group provide their credentials to access it.
Once they upload the data, they need to disconnect from the remote location to prevent unauthorized access by someone else outside the group. Yes it clears it up but why would a user not in the group be on the computer? The local account password should only be known by the users who run the simulation right? I know I'm not answering your question here and I don't know where the credentials would be stored but it seems like you have other issues here as well that could be solved using something simpler like This way a foreign user only has less than 60s to get to the computer if one of the users who knows the password walks away from the computer without locking it manually.
Now im assuming you mean the network share cannot be accessible to everyone you mean there are other users who use this kiosk machine that arent running simulations.. I'd have to ask why are they allowed to?
And do they need to be? I'm trying to troubleshoot share permissions that result from different ways of creating shares on a linux box. So I need to be able to quickly disconnect the windows7 machine from one or all shares that it's connected to, so that I can attempt to reconnect and present credentials again. I was astounded to find there's no evident way to do this that parallels "Disconnect network drive". Office Office Exchange Server. When I click that and it opens the network tab on the right side of my screen, it will almost instantly reconnect to my internet.
I've updated my network adapter, disabled firewalls, rebooted my router about times, and turned off the option to allow Windows to put my Wi-Fi to "sleep" when inactive. I'm at a loss here, and could really use some help! I'm running a wireless connection. Was this reply helpful?
Yes No. Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. Original Title: Random internet problems with Windows 8 My internet will randomly drop while playing games or using the web for anything. This thread is locked. You can follow the question or vote as helpful, but you cannot reply to this thread. I have the same question Report abuse.
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