Windows 7 states I'm not connected to any networks when in fact I am connected to my wireless network??
Win 7 Ultimate 64byteThe network icon in the tray is red with a red X.Network and Sharing center states I am currently not connected to any networks.I click on 'Connect to a Network', at the top of the pop up it says 'Not Connected', below the 'Connections Are Available' icon it shows my wireless network and connected.I can't connect to a HomeGroup.Internet connectivity is working.
January 22nd, 2010 10:29pm

I have been having this same problem for probably about two months. I've tried everything i can think of, and nothing worked. I can't even find anyone else with the same problem; this is the first time I've seen someone else who has the same troubles. I'm using the standard Windows Seven Home Premium. The only difference between my problem and yours is that my Network and Sharing center shows that I am connected to the internet; the Network Icon simply won't update. It's stuck on the red x; yet when I hover over it, it says "Internet Access". A fix for this would be greatly appreciated.
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January 23rd, 2010 3:51pm

have u checked if any other networking adapter is enabled? coz this usually happens when u have more than one adapter running ,specially if u currently using wireless cards so i recommend disable the others adapters which u r not using atm...if later on u need them ,then just reenabled it..hope this helps,RR
January 23rd, 2010 5:26pm

Thanks for your response. Unfortunately, it didn't work.I disabled both network adapters and rebooted. No change.
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January 23rd, 2010 7:49pm

Hi, Please also try following steps to troubleshoot the issue. 1. Download the latest network adapter driver from the manufacturer website and install it in compatible mode. If the issue persists, please temporarily disable the adapter and re-enable it again for a test. 2. Verify relevant service a. Click "Start", go to run, type "services.msc" (without quotation marks) in the open box and press Enter. b. Click Continue button to verify the administrator permission. c. Right click the "Network Location Awareness" service and choose Properties. d. On General tab click Start. e. Choose Automatic next to Startup type. f. Click OK. 3. Restart the computer in Safe Mode with Networking for a test. Thanks, Novak
January 27th, 2010 9:44pm

I have the same problem, and I think it's causing me problems with my vpn. I stopped and restarted my "Network Location Awareness" service and NW/SC found my network, but upon restart it went back to not picking it up. Like the user above I have internet access, but it doesn't show up. In the nwsc when I mapped my network and trouble shooted the connection it says that the DNS server was not responding, which can't be right b/c I can access the internet. I verified that it was working by successfully pinging my DNS.
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January 29th, 2010 9:20pm

Win 7 Ultimate 64byte The network icon in the tray is red with a red X. Network and Sharing center states I am currently not connected to any networks. I click on 'Connect to a Network', at the top of the pop up it says 'Not Connected', below the 'Connections Are Available' icon it shows my wireless network and connected. I can't connect to a HomeGroup. Internet connectivity is working. Ive seen this happening a few times with win7, the network still works, but windows thins its not connected. I havent spent too much time on it since the connection is still working, looks more like an icon bug to me. When the icon says its not connected, connection properties says it is.
January 30th, 2010 1:46am

Yea but, with windows not seeing me as connected to the network, I cannot use connect to my VPN.
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January 30th, 2010 5:01am

So when I do the for-mentioned restart of the Network Location Awareness Service, It restarts the connection, and as soon as it identifies it kicks it back out. I can still access the internet but nwsc still says im not connected, and I can't connect to my vpn... I'm running out of idea's
January 30th, 2010 9:37am

I found a solution for (my version of) this problem. My tray icon never showed the red X, but if I clicked on the icon, the popup showed a bigger icon with a red X, and said "Not connected". As in your case, Internet worked, but I'm unable to setup a VPN connection because it insists on using a non-existent modem, obviously because I'm "not connected" (which I am). I monitored the processes running the NlaSvc and Netprofm services (using ProcMon), and noticed that both were denied read/write access to subkeys within the HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\NetworkList hierarchy. The processes were running as NetworkService and LocalService, respectively, so I tried adding full access for these service accounts to the entire subkey mentioned above. Notice that permissions are not automatically inherited in the registry, so you may need to explicitly "replace all child object permissions with inheritable permissions from this object". Within seconds, Network and Sharing Center tells me I'm connected to my domain. Yay! A reboot was required to fix the tray icon and its popup. However, I'm still unable to add my VPN connection. I'm interested in hearing from you guys if your registries miss the same permissions? If so, Windows 7 must have a bug somewhere with misaligned service permissions/rights.
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February 2nd, 2010 10:08am

Investigating the corresponding registry key on another Windows 7 PC (where NSC has worked fine all the time), reveals that by "factory default", explicit permissions are granted to the accounts "NlaSvc" and "netprofm". These permissions had disappeared on my problem PC - and I have no idea what caused it. Now, I can't find a way to add permissions to these account names, as they can't be located in the domain or on the computer, so my fix in the previous post still stands. For the record: I've been using NCP Secure Entry Client, VMWare Workstation, SQL Server 2005, Visual Studio 2005/2008 and Mobile Device Center, some of which may have had a part in causing the problem (besides Windows 7).
February 3rd, 2010 6:52am

Very good, I got my network back, but as you are having the same issue, I cannot connect to my vpn. Will work with this and let you know. Thanks
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February 10th, 2010 3:01pm

I am having the exact same problem! I can't connect to my VPN and tried the above solution. The problem started like 1 weeks ago.I added the localsevice and network service to the administrator group, and my VPN works. Is there a bug in a recent updates that caused this error?
February 18th, 2010 12:51am

I have been googling for an answer to this situation for over a month. Ugumba, I must thank you for your research because that finally solved my not being relegated to a Windows 7 network. Like most stated, everything worked, but Wndows 7 just wouldn't know it. I will say that I'm not surprised that this situation reared it's ugly head. Since I switched my main development machine from XP sp3 to Win 7 RC, the 'only' problems that I've been encumbered with by Windows 7 (which I love working with) have been caused by the assignment or un-assignment of security permissions in various parts of the Registry. I do appreciate the fact that Microsoft (and in particular--MSDN) released the RC of Windows 7 as soon as they did (again, I will say this OS is steps better than anything that's been released in a long time), but there stills need to be some meticulous QA done from a developer's and user's standpoint. These this don't really stop progress, but they drive you CRAZY...Ugumba, again, many thanks. PHEW!!! Hope to bump into everyone in this forum again soon.John KellgrenFrom PICK and IBM to now, this has been a thirty year circle to get color and a mouse...
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March 1st, 2010 11:49am

Dear Novak, Does the dial-up modem icon disfunciton affect performance? No. Is it as annoying as ____ when it shows I'm not connected and I know I am? YES!! Thanks a lot for this icon fix. Note: You suggested to put Automatic next to the Startup type. For my icon to work right I set it to Automatic (delay) Works great now thanks. You belive I was doing a recovery just to get my icon back. Yikes. Yours truly, Ron Korn
August 23rd, 2010 10:07pm

Ok, trying to figure out how to do all of this. I am having the same message. All I want to do is connect my videos to my XBox. How do I add full access for the Networkservice and Local Service?
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November 3rd, 2010 5:03pm

I also have this issue win 7 home premium 64 bit I have a router with 2 pc attached to it and 1 is in a homegroup and the other is not - when I try to get the other one to connect it complains about the same thing - not connected to a network. Seems to me that the problem is that the computer thinks that I am in a public network and I can't change the properties to say it is a home network I have most of the issues described above Any help very gratefully recv'd thx BF
November 21st, 2010 6:00am

Thank you! This fixed my issue too! I reset the permissions on that key, restarted the Network Location Awareness service, and it worked! You have no idea how annoying it was seeing that I had no connection, and I've spent countless hours trying to fix this, and all this time it was just a registry permission issue. Thank you!
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January 16th, 2011 9:56am

I found a solution for (my version of) this problem. My tray icon never showed the red X, but if I clicked on the icon, the popup showed a bigger icon with a red X, and said "Not connected". As in your case, Internet worked, but I'm unable to setup a VPN connection because it insists on using a non-existent modem, obviously because I'm "not connected" (which I am). I monitored the processes running the NlaSvc and Netprofm services (using ProcMon), and noticed that both were denied read/write access to subkeys within the HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\NetworkList hierarchy. The processes were running as NetworkService and LocalService, respectively, so I tried adding full access for these service accounts to the entire subkey mentioned above. Notice that permissions are not automatically inherited in the registry, so you may need to explicitly "replace all child object permissions with inheritable permissions from this object". Within seconds, Network and Sharing Center tells me I'm connected to my domain. Yay! A reboot was required to fix the tray icon and its popup. However, I'm still unable to add my VPN connection. I'm interested in hearing from you guys if your registries miss the same permissions? If so, Windows 7 must have a bug somewhere with misaligned service permissions/rights. This is the true solution to my case where my machine is running on Windows 7 Enterprise. After assigning permissions to the parent and subkeys, my network connection becomes visible and i am able to set up vpn as well. Thanks Ugumba!! You are much better than those IT experts who can only follow the standard troubleshooting program that everyone can do.
January 17th, 2011 11:39pm

I just have to thank you ugumba. I had to do a repair install and lost the ability to join my network. Your fixed worked! I had been searching for a solution for over 2 months. I'd like to also thank all those who posted their experiences and progress. It has been a tremendous help!
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February 2nd, 2011 4:28pm

Seems like this might be the solution to this problem - would one of you be very kind and post step by step instructions on how to add these permissions? I know how to open regedit, but I don't know where to go after that. I haven't been able to connect to my home network for months, even though my internet connection is fine, and none of the other solutions I've seen have helped.
February 4th, 2011 3:09pm

Hi there, Ugumba's suggestion worked for me too. Thanks David.
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March 1st, 2011 3:27pm

Thanks you! This fixed my problem! I've spent a lot of time on the phone with Microsoft Tech support unable to fix this, and scouring the Internet for a solution. My computer now knows that it's connected to the Internet and I can create/join homegroups.
March 22nd, 2011 12:00am

This finally resolved my issue, after spending hours of research and trial and error, thanks! :)
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April 1st, 2011 4:32pm

Just had the same problem. Look at the top row of your keyboard, the third from the left ... looks like an antenna (also has F2 on the key). Just press it once and your internet will come back. Very painful lesson I learned, too. Good luck.
April 12th, 2011 10:34am

Just had the same problem. Look at the top row of your keyboard, the third from the left ... looks like an antenna (also has F2 on the key). Just press it once and your internet will come back. Very painful lesson I learned, too. Good luck.
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April 12th, 2011 10:35am

Ugumba's answer fixed my problem as well. The problem with the network showing as "not connected" caused my Lync 2010 communicator to give me the following error: "Cannot sign in because the server is temporarily unavailable" and denied my login. After fixing the permissions on the registry, my Lync connected flawless. Thanks.
April 27th, 2011 8:18am

I am having the exact problem which Ugumba was experiencing. I am very excited to see there is a solution. But the problem is, I do not have any clue how to use Ugumba's method. I am not familiar with modifying windows reg keys. I am still learning. So please, could somebody please kindly show me the step-by-step instructions on how to use Ugumba's method to solve the problem? I really need to fix this problem. Thank you so much!!
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April 29th, 2011 10:04pm

Ok I had the same problem and used the following to make it work following Ugumbas post Click Start Type Run Type Regedit Expand HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE Expand Software Expand Microsoft Expand Windows NT Expand Current Version Right Click Network List Right Click Permissions For all users except CREATOR OWNER ensure that you have Full Control and Read ticked for all other accounts. Reboot your machine Red X has gone on mine and the internet works ok Now going to try a VPN and set up a homegroup. Will let you know in 10 minutes
April 30th, 2011 5:43pm

VPN and Homegroup working fine.
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April 30th, 2011 5:59pm

deanfp, thank you for your reply. I followed your instructions and it worked, partially. My situation is like this: I have three computers on my home network. One desktop (windows 7 home-premium 64 bit, pc1), two laptops (one is windows 7 home premium 64 bit, pc2 , one is windows 7 ultimate 32 bit, pc3). The desktop is wired to the router and two laptops are wirelessly connected to the router. I created a home group from laptop pc2. I can join the home group from pc3 without any problem. But I can not see the home group from desktop pc1, because it says the computer is not connected to any network. But actually I can access internet from this computer. That is my reason I came here for help. I followed the instructions and reboot. Now my desktop pc1 can see the home group. And this computer is part of the home network. That's great! But when I tried to join the home group I created from pc2 by clicking "join now" , and then typed in the password, it says " a homegroup can only be created on a home network. To change your network location setting, open network and sharing center in control panel". I am confused... Is this desktop not part of the home network? If it is not, why it can still detects there is a homegroup. Is there something wrong with my router setup?
May 1st, 2011 2:02pm

Hi I dont know too much about Homegroups but.... Are they on the same version of Windows? Also do you have a router or a hub? I think most routers only allow 5 devices and it can be that if your synching a mobile or blackberry to the router it could be using up the number of allowed connections. Failing that can you maybe try removing the homegroup from the pc wired to the router and set it up on one of the others and then try adding pc2 and pc3 to the group?
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May 1st, 2011 3:15pm

I don't know if this is exactly the problem described above but it is very similar. I was fixing my microphone for online game I had in another tab when a red x appeared on my network connection. It says "Not Connected - No connections are available" my internet doesn't work either so it is not just the red x. All when I look at the network map it says "The adapter is not connected". Troubleshooting doesn't work, I tried Ugumba's solution and I have tried disabling and enabling the network adapter yet I still cannot connect to the internet. I don't know what I did to cause the problem and I have no ideas left on how to fix it. Oh and I don't think it is my router because I can get on my laptop just fine.
May 3rd, 2011 2:21pm

i was having the same problem. but now solved. what i did was .. 1. I disabled all the unwanted network connections 2. then there was a connection bridge with my Wirless connection. so i disabled it also. plz chk the screenshot http://www.picscrazy.com/view/deskn 3. my problem was solved. NB: the 'services.msc' and disabling just the network connection didnt solve my problem earlier.
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May 20th, 2011 12:38pm

Awesome, I had the exact same problem. This worked like a charm. --Rod
May 21st, 2011 3:40pm

Thank You Ugumba! I was getting nowhere until I stumbled upon your post. Granting write permission to the Network list key in the registry has fixed my problem. As a test I tried to create a VPN cnnection and was unsuccessful. Windows does not "see" an adapter (modem or network card) it can use. I'm attempting to correct this now by resetting the registry to default permissions using Subinacl and will post my results. Edit: Resetting permissions on the whole registry did not help, I still cannot create VPN connections. I don't need one on this system but I figured I'd post the info. I'll keep trying, If I find a solution I'll post it here.
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August 8th, 2011 1:04pm

Ok I had the same problem and used the following to make it work following Ugumbas post Click Start Type Run Type Regedit Expand HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE Expand Software Expand Microsoft Expand Windows NT Expand Current Version Right Click Network List Right Click Permissions For all users except CREATOR OWNER ensure that you have Full Control and Read ticked for all other accounts. Reboot your machine Red X has gone on mine and the internet works ok Now going to try a VPN and set up a homegroup. Will let you know in 10 minutes That worked for me also!! Thank you!!
August 10th, 2011 10:33pm

Ok I had the same problem and used the following to make it work following Ugumbas post Click Start Type Run Type Regedit Expand HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE Expand Software Expand Microsoft Expand Windows NT Expand Current Version Right Click Network List Right Click Permissions For all users except CREATOR OWNER ensure that you have Full Control and Read ticked for all other accounts. Reboot your machine Red X has gone on mine and the internet works ok Now going to try a VPN and set up a homegroup. Will let you know in 10 minutes I did the above, which partly worked but found that I still couldn't select Home, Work or Public. Solved it by renaming the NetworkList\NLA\Cache, which after a reboot apparently fixes the issue. Wondering if that could have solved the problem alone? Click Start Type Run Type Regedit Expand HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE Expand Software Expand Microsoft Expand Windows NT Expand Current Version Expand NetworkList Expand Nla Right click and Rename Cache to e.g. Cache.old Reboot your machine
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August 23rd, 2011 2:21am

Ok I had the same problem and used the following to make it work following Ugumbas post Click Start Type Run Type Regedit Expand HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE Expand Software Expand Microsoft Expand Windows NT Expand Current Version Right Click Network List Right Click Permissions For all users except CREATOR OWNER ensure that you have Full Control and Read ticked for all other accounts. Reboot your machine Red X has gone on mine and the internet works ok Now going to try a VPN and set up a homegroup. Will let you know in 10 minutes That worked for me also!! Thank you!! this worked till i did a restart, now it is back to saying connected to network/no internet access.. and a few programs i have wont work untill they have internet access {like Steam client}, ive tried using different routers/modems i own. still no luck. all the permissions and services are started and working as such. but still no idea why windwos wont say its connecte to the internet thanks in advance for any help
September 23rd, 2011 8:22am

Yay! No more Red X. Thanks to ugumba and deanfp for the solution that worked for me! I think this happened because I deleted the user account that created the HomeGroup (because it was corrupt.) Thank you so much for your help! Eric
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October 10th, 2011 7:36pm

Here's what finally worked for me. Go into device manager, right-click on the wireless adapter and choose uninstall. Then, after the adapter is uninstalled, right-click on your computer name at the top and choose Scan for hardware changes. The wireless adapter reappears and it installs properly as a network adapter throughout the system. Reconnect to your wireless network and you're up and running.
November 13th, 2011 5:23pm

Thank-you so much for this post. They should make a knowledge base article from this. We just recently deployed Lync in our business as well and two users were having this issue as well. This fix really solved the problem quickly for us. Thanks again!!
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December 16th, 2011 4:20pm

Win 7 Ultimate 64byte The network icon in the tray is red with a red X. Network and Sharing center states I am currently not connected to any networks. I click on 'Connect to a Network', at the top of the pop up it says 'Not Connected', below the 'Connections Are Available' icon it shows my wireless network and connected. I can't connect to a HomeGroup. Internet connectivity is working. went throught most suggestions (except reg and permission changes-thats a pandoras box) but didnt work. five hours later i manually setup my wireless router and it worked fine. windows should bundle aspirin or oxycoton with their product.
December 16th, 2011 6:07pm

GOTO Hkey_local_machine\software\microsoft\windows NT\current version\networklist and right click on each folder inside it such as NEWNETWORKS and NLA and PERMISSIONS, PROFILES and SIGNATURES then choose permissions after clicking right click now when you open the permissions dialoge for each file you`ll have a list of USERS and a list of permissions so give each user in the list a full control and you`ll see the problem solved. i did that before some minutes and i`m so happy now because i solved it. and i want to help each body to solve it too. so this image will help you: http://www.megaupload.com/?d=SIM1VV9Z
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December 22nd, 2011 12:50pm

I found a solution for (my version of) this problem. My tray icon never showed the red X, but if I clicked on the icon, the popup showed a bigger icon with a red X, and said "Not connected". As in your case, Internet worked, but I'm unable to setup a VPN connection because it insists on using a non-existent modem, obviously because I'm "not connected" (which I am). I monitored the processes running the NlaSvc and Netprofm services (using ProcMon), and noticed that both were denied read/write access to subkeys within the HKLM\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\NetworkList hierarchy. The processes were running as NetworkService and LocalService, respectively, so I tried adding full access for these service accounts to the entire subkey mentioned above. Notice that permissions are not automatically inherited in the registry, so you may need to explicitly "replace all child object permissions with inheritable permissions from this object". Within seconds, Network and Sharing Center tells me I'm connected to my domain. Yay! A reboot was required to fix the tray icon and its popup. However, I'm still unable to add my VPN connection. I'm interested in hearing from you guys if your registries miss the same permissions? If so, Windows 7 must have a bug somewhere with misaligned service permissions/rights. This is the true solution to my case where my machine is running on Windows 7 Enterprise. After assigning permissions to the parent and subkeys, my network connection becomes visible and i am able to set up vpn as well. Thanks Ugumba!! You are much better than those IT experts who can only follow the standard troubleshooting program that everyone can do. Thanks, Ugamba. It worked on my Win7 Pro x64 Computer like a charm. You're the man!
January 16th, 2012 12:03pm

I'm still having the same problem after following these steps... does anyone know of anything else I can do? Would this affect my ability to use a network printer?
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January 31st, 2012 11:10pm

thank you very much It Solves my problem within seconds.
February 4th, 2012 1:44am

I have a similar but slightly different problem. I'm connected to a network with internet (which is how I'm posting this) but the icon is the yellow star for "connections available". If I open the network and sharing centre, it shows that I'm not connected to the internet, although obviously I am because I'm posting this. When the network is still in the 'identifying' phase, though, I get white bars as I would for a normal connection -- and then it goes back to the yellow star. I've tried every fix in this thread and none of them have worked for me. I have all the same problems -- can't connect to homegroup (and therefore can't, say, stream media to an XBox) and can't log in to EA's Origin, but I can log in to Steam. Anyone know what's up?
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February 14th, 2012 7:28pm

Thank you ugumba for the fix. It worked perfectly.
February 25th, 2012 12:51pm

Well i have done all the steps with the register fix also reinstalled the latest wifi drivers a few times. reboot. still not working, and this is freaking me out. Can't acces the network or anything only directly by ip number and not always so i got a problem with my lan printer. Any one have another idea ? running win 7 X64 on a asus n53sv laptop
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February 27th, 2012 6:14pm

I have the same problem as many others: cannot log onto Origin's online application. My network icon in the taskbar shows my network, but has a yellow triangle with an exclamation point and a popup message that says "no internet connection"; so Origin's application will not let me log in and play my Mass Effect 3 game, although every other application(Internet Explorer, Steam, etc) sees and accesses the Internet, despite the "no internet" message. I used Ugamba's solution and Deanfp's step-by-step on two different computers running Win 7 Ultimate 64 bit, and on both computers it solved the problem successfully... but only until the next bootup. I've run Regedit since then, but all permissions I updated remain in place, and I still have the "no internet" and therefore Origin still won't work.
March 10th, 2012 9:36am

Here's what finally worked for me. Go into device manager, right-click on the wireless adapter and choose uninstall. Then, after the adapter is uninstalled, right-click on your computer name at the top and choose Scan for hardware changes. The wireless adapter reappears and it installs properly as a network adapter throughout the system. Reconnect to your wireless network and you're up and running. I tried everything in this thread and nothing worked until I tried what RyanBrubaker posted this and I tried his suggestion and my wireless connection is showing up now, thanks RyanBrubaker.
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March 19th, 2012 12:05am

Thanks Ugumba!!Ram.
April 13th, 2012 2:21am

In my case all i did was change the available profile and it worked for me i'm using windows 7 home edition and broadband connection. Go to start and wright regedit Expand HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE Expand Software Expand Microsoft Expand Windows NT Expand Current Version Expand Networklists Expand Profiles click on the folders under the profile and next to description it will have the name of the connection pick the folder that has the name if the one u are using and right click it go to permissions in user tike allow full control should work for you now.
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April 24th, 2012 4:05am

That worked for me, I disabled every connection but the one i was using and my network icon shows im connected again...Thanks
April 25th, 2012 7:46pm

"Here's what finally worked for me. Go into device manager, right-click on the wireless adapter and choose uninstall. Then, after the adapter is uninstalled, right-click on your computer name at the top and choose Scan for hardware changes. The wireless adapter reappears and it installs properly as a network adapter throughout the system. Reconnect to your wireless network and you're up and running." This has worked for me. I have been trying for weeks to get a solution. My new HP Pavilion dv6 laptop would connect to the wifi at home but at work I had the constant message "Unable to connect". And at home we have two routers and it would only connect to one of them. I tried changing the registry as Ugumba suggested but that did not work for me.
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April 28th, 2012 8:11am

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