Start another thread. This one is marked as Solved and will get little notice. Supply information as to how you connect. Wired/wireless. Adsl,PPPoE or cable etc. Also post what exactly you have tried.
Type: Posts; User: jtarin; Keyword(s):
Start another thread. This one is marked as Solved and will get little notice. Supply information as to how you connect. Wired/wireless. Adsl,PPPoE or cable etc. Also post what exactly you have tried.
Terminal
Yes but every one of your terminal command requests you were asked to initiate ended in you coming back with zero results which is virtually impossible on an installed system.
From the first page to this you have not provided the information about the fact you were trying to connect with a Ubuntu Live CD or given all the information that was asked of you. I for one cannot...
I want to see if your idea and our idea of a terminal is the same thing.
Could you post a screenshot of the terminal you are using?
Correct your are.....thanks for the explanation.Sometimes I forget the depth I need to go.:P
Open a terminal and type
gnome-nettooland please post the "data" if it doesn't come up. That data tells us what's wrong. You don't have to post all but put it in code tags.
Then that command I gave you should bring it up. I don't have 11.04 so I don't know here you can visibly look for it, but mine is under "Administration" in Gnome.
You need to install "The NET-3 networking toolkit".....look in Synaptic
Open a terminal and type "gnome-nettool".
Plenty of places to ge that info on the net....here's one.
http://www.hcidata.info/host2ip.cgi
Having to use a proxy with only certain sites tells me that these sights have blocked your IP number. You could always write an email to support of any sights your having problems with and give them...
That's what the /etc/resolv.conf file is for....but I still haven't heard any results from this.
It won't hurt anything. Those are Google public nameservers. Fast and reliable. You can always change back.
And your router contains your nameserver information.
Record those numbers in case you want to change back and then substitute with the ones I posted. If it works we'll make it permanent.
Are you in New Delhi with BSNLNET?
I was going to suggest try a proxy server the destination site might be blocking.
The command is not "/etc/resolv.conf". The command is gksudo gedit /etc/resolv.conf". If you can't find that file then that's the problem.
Have you followed my last post? I didn't see the results.
Use the same procedure and open /etc/resolv.conf and edit to look like this:
nameserver 8.8.8.8
nameserver 8.8.4.4save...then try to connect.
OK...your using Natty so I don't kbnowif this will work...try the ALT + F2 keys. There should be a dialogue pop-up on your desktop. In that dialogue type gnome-terminal. The terminal will open and...
Open a terminal and type
gksudo gedit /etc/hosts and post a copy.