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Over the New Year's weekend, my laptop picked up a virus. The techs at work couldn't pull it out (a trojan of some sort) and had to wipe the hard drive. Spent last night transferring files from my desktop to the laptop and re-downloading different AV stuff as well as Firefox.
I know Firefox worked last night but this evening it doesn't connect. I know it's not my homepage, etc because it all works properly on my desktop. The only difference between the desktop and laptop (well, other than the laptop being easier to hold on the couch than the desktop ) is the laptop runs Vista (yuck, ptooie) and the desktop XP.
I've been running FF and Avira AV since Oct when this laptop was given to me so I know it works with Vista. What I can't figure out is why it worked last night but tonight it won't connect. IE connects so I know it's not an internet issue.
Anyone run into this before? I'm pretty sure it's a setup issue or conflict of some sort but I don't have the first clue as to where to start looking and what I should or shouldn't change.
Thanks!
If these walls could talk, I'd listen to the floor.
Have you tried uninstalling it and then reinstalling. It may have just glitched on you my FF was acting goofy a few months back and that is what I did no problems since.
Jeremy
GySgt USMC Ret
To err is human, To forgive is devine, Neither of which is Marine Corps policy Semper Fidelis
I had a trojan one time that disabled my Firefox (among other things). I uninstalled and reinstalled Firefox, but that only worked for a short while. Then, I installed and ran "Spybot", and it resolved the problem. It seems to dig even deeper than Norton.
Did you look under the "File" menu and make sure "Work Offline" was not checked? Simplistic solution, I know, but sometimes Firefox sets that when it has a connection problem.
Also some of my applications have to have the LAN set to automatically detect settings in order to work. Then on other days, for some strange reason, I have to turn the auto detect off for it to work.
"Make yourself an honest man, and then you may be sure that there is one less scoundrel in the world." - Thomas Carlyle
Me, too. I use FF but on a large screen iMac. Zero virus issues.
"Congressmen who willfully take actions during wartime that damage morale, and undermine the military are saboteurs and should be arrested, exiled or hanged"....President Abraham Lincoln
All it does it stop some bad processes, so your AV or malware software can find and remove the bad stuff. sometimes you have to run a scan multiple times.
In firefox, go to the tools menu, select options. In the options screen, select the advanced tab. select system defaults, and check for Firefox to be the default browser.
What's going on is Internet Explorer wants to be default.
Andy, it's a good idea to have several browsers installed on your computer in case you have a virus infection. Many times the virus will enter through one browser and will work through that browser but you might be able to side step the virus by downloading a fix via a different browser. I made that mistake once before because I tried to get rid of all traces of Windoze. I ended up having to download Chrome to fix my problem. Ever since then I have kept 3 browsers on hand.
They don't take up much space, I just don't let it download all the tool bars and be careful which one you allow to be your default browser.
If you're gonna be stupid ya gotta be tough-
Isiah 55:8&9
It's easier to fool people than it is to convince them they have been fooled.