Frequently Asked Questions
From time to time you may experience problems with your connection
to River City Internet. This may happen due to a variety of
different causes; installation of new hardware that requires
reconfiguration, hardware failure of serial port or modem, conflicts
in newly installed software, inadvertent changes made to system
settings, installation of software from another ISP, computer
virus infection, changes made to your account and incomplete
configuring for those changes, moving your River City Internet
connection to a new computer, or a change of modem, hard drive
or similar system upgrade or modification.
These are just some of the things that can happen that causes
loss of your connection to River City Internet, requiring diagnosis
and correction. Like any diagnostic situation, it is important
for the person attempting to fix the problem to have on hand
all of the relevant information relating to the failure. If
you find yourself in this situation, be as precise and complete
as possible - vague statements that something "does not work"
may be a starting point, but it falls well short of successful
diagnosis and correction. Almost always, the quality of technical
support anyone can offer is dependant on the quality of information
you are able to offer.
The material presented in this document describes some of the
most common problems that occur with internet connected computers.
It is offered as a first aid kit for the less serious problems
- those that can be fixed relatively easily. Of course, "relatively
easily" is always dependent on the expertise and experience
of the person attempting to fix the problem. Hopefully the information
offered here will help bridge the gap between lack of experience
and successfully repairing your own system to a fully functional
state. If you run into problems you cannot solve by yourself,
please contact us for technical
assistance. Avoid leaving problems uncorrected, especially
if you do not know the cause. Also, do not leave it until the
last minute, when you may need to urgently require
the use of your internet connection for some reason - some problems
cannot be fixed simply, and may require a reasonably lengthy
solution, such as complete reinstallation of the operating system.
Rest assured that it is in our best interests, as well as yours,
to keep you connected and using our service.
Contents
- Connecting to River City Internet
- Communications Problems
- Web Browsing Problems
- Email Problems
- Software Problems
This category of problems describes the situation where your
modem and the modems at the remote site will not connect or
stay connected. There can be a number of causes for this, including
line quality, modem incompatibility or a problem with the modem
or port at the remote end. Select the description of your problem
which best describes your situation.
- The dialer complains that the modem is malfunctioning
or it is not responding.
- If you have an external modem (i.e. one that is
not inside the case of your computer) is your modem connected
and turned on? Is the cable seated firmly in both the modem
and the computer? Is the correct serial port and/or modem
selected? Is the modem connected to the correct port on
the computer? The connection between the modem and the computer
may be faulty, or the connection may have been broken. Check
all connections, then check them again. If the serial cable
is old and the connections appear suspect, get another and
try that.
Turn the modem off, wait 10 seconds, then try again - is
the result the same? Some modems will "hang" and fail to
respond after a power spike or brown-out; if you are familiar
with the modem lights, a hung modem will usually appear
to have a different lighting array to one that is functioning
normally. Powering the modem off, waiting a little, then
powering it back on will normally fix such problems.
If you have an internal modem, is the card seated firmly
in the motherboard. You may need to open the case and physically
look at the card to ensure that it is. Sometimes cards do
"pop" out of their connection to the computer, and will
appear to be dead.
Internal modems can get hung too, but there is no way to
power them off without turning the computer off as well.
Shut down your operating system, power down and - again
- wait 10 seconds, then turn it back on.
If you still cannot solve the problem, then it is time to
consult the experts. The
problem may be the modem itself has malfunctioned and needs
to be repaired, all the cables you tried may have been faulty,
or the serial port on your computer is not operational.
A hardware technician should be able to narrow down the
exact problem fairly quickly.
-
- The dialer complains that there is no dial tone.
- This message indicates that the modem is functioning,
but it cannot detect a dial tone on the phone line. Normally,
this means that there is a problem with the connection between
the phone line itself and the modem - it is the equivalent
of lifting the handset on a standard phone and hearing nothing.
The first thing to check are the connections - that the
jack connector on the modem is in the correct connection
(some modems have an additional connector usually labeled
Phone which are for handsets), and that the cable
is firmly plugged into the correct phone outlet on the wall
or skirting board.
After the obvious potential causes have been eliminated,
it is time to check the phone line itself. Unplug the modem
and plug in a standard handset. Lift the receiver. If there
is a dial tone, then reconnect the modem and try again.
If the same result, then there may well be an incompatibility
between your modem and the U.S. dial tone frequencies. Sometimes
including "ATX3" or lower values of 'X' will solve this
problem because the modem is told not to wait for a dial
tone and dial regardless. If this still does not solve the
problem, then the modem is probably malfunctioning and needs
to be repaired or replaced.
If there is no dial tone on the handset, then the problem
is with the telephone line. If you cannot determine what
the problem is, then call your phone company for assistance.
- The dialer complains there is no answer.
- Try to dial again. If the problem keeps recurring then
power the modem off then on (or shutdown and turn off your
computer briefly if you have an internal modem), then try
again.
If the problem still is not fixed, continue. The first thing
to do if this problem arises is to determine if there really
is no answer or if your modem simply is not connecting.
Almost all modems have a speaker, and this should be enabled.
Assuming it is not already enabled, you do so by sending
the command ATM1L3 to the modem. If you are running
Windows 95/98 or Windows NT, go to Control Panel
/ Modems highlight the modem you're having problems
with, click Properties then open the Connection
tab and click on the Advanced button. In the Extra
settings field, enter ATM1L3.
If for some reason you cannot enable the modem's speakers,
or the speaker is too quiet to hear (some internals in particular
are almost impossible to hear), then an alternative method
is to dial the number with a normal telephone and see if
a modem answers the line. Either way, if the line is answered
by a modem and you still cannot connect, then your modem
has a connection problem. Connection problems may arise
from a modem incompatibility; however, these are rare these
days with modems manufactured within the last 4-5 years
as most of them are based on standard chipsets. Modems on
our POPs at River City Internet have been selected for high
compatibility and reliability. If your modem consistently
cannot connect to them, then your modem may be malfunctioning,
may be incorrectly configured or could even require replacement.
If the line does not answer (i.e. it "rings out"), then
please contact our technical
support. It may be that you have been unlucky to dial
in during a maintenance period which requires the POP to
have been taken off-line, or some serious power failure
in our area has forced us to take the POP off-line. We should
be able to provide a reason for the unavailability of our
service, and hopefully provide you with an estimated time
when we will be back online. Fortunately, this type of event
is very rare.
Another cause of this problem is a congested telephone exchange;
the engaged tone in such a situation is slightly different
from a normal one, and some modems do not detect it and
will not return BUSY. If this is the case, see the next
section.
- The dialer complains that the line is busy.
- At River City Internet, we monitor our line usage very
carefully to ensure that there are sufficient lines to cope
with demand even at peak periods. If we find that we have
all or most lines in use during peak periods, we will add
more lines to cope with the demand. This means that getting
an engaged tone because all of our lines are in use should
be a very rare occurrence.
Peak periods at River City Internet are 3pm to 9pm weekdays,
and 4pm to midnight on weekends. The possibility of all
of our lines being busy outside of those time periods is
almost zero. If you find you are getting engaged tones at
any time, and redialing still results in busy tones, then
it is most likely a telephone exchange problem. Exchange
busy occurs because the phone exchange becomes congested.
Fortunately, this is rare, but it still can and does occur.
Call the technical assistance number for your telephone
company (assuming you can get through) - they should be
able to assist.
- The dialer claims that my username or password is incorrect,
or that authorization fails.
- This occurs if you are supplying incorrect details for
your River City Internet account name and password. Note
that both the username and password are case sensitive!
For example, the username "bob" is not the same as "Bob".
As a standard, usernames on River City Internet are always
lower case, contain no punctuation or spaces and are 1 to
15 characters in length - check to make sure the username
you are using (on the Connect to River City Internet
box) is correct. The username entered there is the same
as your email address username@mach3ww.com. Note
that your username is not the same as your real name.
Passwords are also case sensitive. Since passwords are not
displayed (characters are substituted by '*'), this can
be difficult to check. Make sure that your CAPSLOCK key
is not on - this is the number one cause of password
failures. Be careful to type it correctly.
Asking Windows to save your password is one way to avoid
this problem. However, there are security implications in
doing so - anyone with physical access to your computer
can then use your dialup connection without needing to know
the password, and it is also possible to "steal"
saved passwords. You will have to decide for yourself whether
to save your password or not depending on your situation.
The connection box on Windows NT may also ask for a domain
in addition to a username and password. When connecting
to River City Internet, make sure that this box is blank
(empty). Specifying any domain name here will cause your
username to be presented to the River City Internet POP
as DOMAIN\\username which will not work.
If you think you have entered the correct username and password,
and that none of the above applies to your situation, please
contact Jack Wilcox for
assistance.
- I can successfully connect, but the connection drops
after a few minutes.
- Line dropouts can be an extremely frustrating problem
to resolve, as there are a variety of possible causes, and
some of them are beyond either your or our control. River
City Internet connects to the telephone network via a fiber
optic, fully digital connection, so we can guarantee consistent
good line quality to our local exchange. Line quality elsewhere,
however, is an unknown, but fortunately this has improved
greatly for metropolitan areas over the last few years,
so the incidence of line dropouts due to poor quality phone
lines should be rare.
Telephonic equipment and facilities connected to your phone
lines can affect your connection. First, make sure that
Call Waiting has been disabled. Connect a handset
to the line, and using your handset dial *70. This
will prevent incoming calls from interfering with your connection.
Next, try disconnecting any other phone equipment attached
to the phone line. Some handsets are a major culprit in
disrupting data communications, as it will pull current
from the line every several minutes, causing the line to
either hang up or become unusable. Similarly, some hands-free
and cordless stations can cause problems, as can fax machines
and similar equipment. If you do not experience the dropout
problem after disconnecting all other telephone equipment
from the line, try reconnecting them one at a time until
the line dropouts start again - this should isolate the
piece of equipment that is causing the problem. Many of
them can be modified to prevent this from happening.
If you have ruled out the above possibilities, then contact
your phone company and see if your line can be examine for
line quality problems. Check also for the possibility that
your phone company may be carrying out network maintenance
on either your exchange or ours - this type of work can
be very disruptive to both voice and data communications,
but usually only lasts for a few hours.
The possibility also exists that your modem may be overheating
or faulty. Older modems are more likely to be subject to
this problem than newer equipment, but this is less likely
to be the case than general problems with telephone line
quality.
- When I dial into River City Internet, I get the message
"Windows is unable to negotiate a compatible set of protocols..."
- There are two main causes for this problem; the protocols
configured for your River City Internet dial-in are incorrect,
or there is a communications problem between your computer
and modem. To resolve this, first check the dialup connection
settings.
- Open My Computer by double clicking on it.
- Double click on Dial-Up Networking.
- With the right mouse button click once on
the River City Internet dialup icon.
- Select Properties from the popup menu by clicking
once with the right mouse button.
- The River City Internet properties sheet will
appear with the tab; General, Server Types
and Scripting.
- Click the Server Types tab. The settings for
the items on this sheet should be as follows:
- Type of Dial-Up Server
- PPP: Windows ... Internet (the exact wording
will depend on the version of windows you are running)
- Log onto network
- unchecked
- Enable software compression
- checked (you may wish to uncheck this if
you typically download mostly files which are already
compressed - graphics and zip files, for example)
- Require encrypted password
- unchecked
- Enable data encryption (Windows 98 only)
- unchecked
- In the Allowed network protocols section, make
sure that both NetBEUI and IPX/SPX Compatible
are both unchecked, and that TCP/IP is
checked.
- Click on the TCP/IP Settings button next to
the TCP/IP checkbox item. The TCP/IP Settings sheet
will be displayed.
- Checking to ensure that the following settings are
active:
- Server assigned IP address
- Server assigned name server addresses
- Use IP header compression (on)
- Use default gateway on remote network (on)
- Click OK to close the TCP/IP Settings
box.
- Click OK to close the River City Internet
Properties sheet.
If you did not have to modify anything, or the problem still
is not corrected, then the problem is probably a communications
problem between your computer and modem, where your computer
is not receiving all of the data that the modem is sending
or vice versa. Things you may wish to try:
- Check the cable between your computer and modem. Is
it fully plugged in at both ends?
- Turn your modem off, leave it off for 10-20 seconds,
then back on.
- Replace the cable.
- Change the baud rate to a lower value, if it is set
at 115200, then try 57600, if at 57600, try 38400. Baud
rate may be modified from the General properties
sheet of your River City Internet connection icon, and
pressing the Configure button next to the modem
selector.
- I can connect to River City Internet
ok, but as soon as I try to browse the web or collect email
the connection hangs up and starts to redial
- Many software packages (particularly those from Microsoft)
can be "tied" to a specific dialup connection, so that when
you require network services, the appropriate dialup connection
is established, and the requested task is carried out. However,
this causes problems if you have removed a dialup connection,
or created multiple connection profiles that connect to
River City Internet, and use a different one to actually
connect than the one that the software is configured to
use.
The first thing to do in such cases is to open My Computer
/ Dial-Up Networking, then remove any and all duplicated
connection profiles. For example, you may have an icon labeled
River City Internet and another called Connect
to River City Internet. Remove all except the one you
actually use to connect to our server, which, if you set
up your system using the River City Internet Setup Disk,
will be called River City Internet.
Next, you need to adjust your software's configuration so
that it will use the correct connection profile, and not
attempt to use one of the ones you have just deleted. If
the problem occurs with Internet Explorer, then open
the Control Panel and double click on the Internet
or Internet Options icon, select the Connection
tab, and select the correct connection to use.
If this problem arises when you attempt to retrieve or send
mail from Outlook or Outlook Express, then
open the program, and from the Tools menu, select
the item labeled Accounts.... Select the Mail
tab on the Internet Accounts window, then double
click on the account name. The account properties will be
displayed. Click the Connection tab. Now, use the
selector to pick the River City Internet dial-up
connection (which should be the only one left, unless you
have other service providers configured).
This category describes problems which relate to communicating
with remote internet sites. It assumes that you are able to
successfully connect to River City Internet and log into our
servers, but for one reason or another software on your computer
has problems connecting to or receiving data from remote servers
on the internet.
- I connect to River City Internet, but I can't get anywhere!
- See next question.
- My browser/ICQ/irc/mud/mail program cannot connect
to a remote site.
- The first thing to determine in this situation is whether
the problem is a general one that affects all sites or whether
the problem is with the remote server you are attempting
to connect to. Try connecting to other sites to see if they
can be contacted. If the problem is with web browsing, try
the River City
Internet home page to make sure that is working. If
this comes up ok, but nothing outside of River City Internet
can be reached, then there is a possibility that River City
Internet's connection to the internet may be down.
In either case, please contact our help desk immediately.
We are probably aware of and in the process of correcting
the problem, but at least we are able to verify that this
is or is not the problem. We hope that this will never happen
at all, but it has happened in the past usually for reasons
beyond our control, so be aware of the possibility.
If the problem is with a specific site, then try again later.
Servers on the internet do require maintenance periods when
they will be unavailable, so a small amount of downtime
is normal. If the problem persists, call our helpdesk to
see if we can help either explain the problem or help to
resolve it.
Network routing can often be an issue that arises with problems
like this. Information on the internet is sent as "packets"
from client to server and vice versa, and each packet is
sent from server to server until it reaches its destination.
How and where a packet is forwarded by each host depends
on how it is routed, and this being an imperfect
world, sometimes packet routing is faulty or just plain
wrong.
- TRACEROUTE A useful diagnostic tool that is provided
with almost every internet ready system is called traceroute,
which can be used to track down problems with network routing,
or even just find out whether a server machine is operational
or not. On Microsoft Windows systems, this program is called
tracert. To use it, open a DOS or Command
prompt (via Start / Programs / MSDOS
Prompt or Command Prompt) and type tracert <name-of-server-you-are-trying-to-contact>.
For example, tracert www.ibm.com
This displays the path packets will have to travel to reach
the remote server, and also reports the response times in
milliseconds (thousandths of seconds) - that is,
how long it takes for packets to reach a remote server.
On a 33.6k connection, a base time to our server (www.express56.com)
will be anything from 120ms to 200ms. If you see an asterisk
'*' appear instead of a time, it usually indicates some
packet loss on the link. Occasional packet loss is normal
for very remote sites, and should be rare on close sites.
Some internet routing hosts do not respond to traceroute
and ping queries, so some will always show asterisks, even
in zero packet loss conditions.
If tracert does not respond at all after pressing
ENTER on the command line, then you probably have a connection
problem to River City Internet itself. If this happens,
then try tracing your connection to 205.217.172.33
(one of our DNS servers) to see if you can get any response.
If still no success, then hang up, reconnect and try again.
Contact our helpdesk if you continue to have problems.
Traceroute may show that it can partially get to a site,
but times out after a few 'hops'. This is indicative of
a failed route OR a congested link somewhere in the path
between your system and the remote server. If multiple attempts
always stop at the same host, then it is probably a failed
link. Internet backbone routers will normally adapt to this
situation and route around failed paths; however, if the
route stops at what is the primary gateway for the network
you're attempting to reach, then the service may be unavailable
until the problem with the gateway has been rectified.
Sometimes tracing the network route to a remote server will
work, but the server will still fail to respond. This may
mean that the software hosting the service you are trying
to connect to is down or not responding, even though the
machine on which it runs is operating.
- When I try to connect to a remote
site, the host name is invalid, cannot be found or cannot
be resolved.
- This means that the host name you have entered or configured
fails to return an IP address when the software attempts
to look it up in the DNS (domain name service). To explain:
DNS, or Domain Name Service, is the name given
to the internet wide database that contains mappings between
host and domain names, and their IP addresses. All communications
on the internet utilizes IP addresses only, and the DNS
makes those IP addresses usable by providing the
ability to use host (individual machines) and domain (network)
names instead. For example, it is much easier to remember
"www.mach3ww.com" than it is to remember "63.160.140.130".
The first thing to check is that you are actually connected
to River City Internet! If you aren't connected anywhere,
then host name lookup failures is not only normal, but entirely
expected.
Failure to look up a host or domain name can arise from
a number of causes. The simplest one, although most rare,
is that the servers on which the master and secondary
lists of hosts for a domain may be malfunctioning or down
(every domain has at least two servers which will respond
as "authoritative" for a domain). A small amount of downtime
is usually acceptable in the overall scheme of things, since
domain information can still be cached elsewhere on the
internet - in other non-authoritative domain name servers
- for a limited period of time. Extended downtime can result
in complete domains apparently "disappearing" off the internet.
Almost every ISP or network has at least two domain name
servers. When you connect to River City Internet, your system
will automatically use our domain name servers to look up
host names and make queries on your behalf. All of this
is usually invisible to you, except when it does not work,
for whatever reason. It is possible that both of River City
Internet's domain servers may be down, in which case an
attempt to resolve any domain or host name will
fail. Fortunately, this event too, is unlikely. Failure
of both River City Internet name servers at the same time
has not happened ever in our eight years of operation except
due to a power failure that affected the entire network
(but dialing into our service did not work either).
The most common cause of DNS lookup failure is a configuration
problem in Windows 95 or Windows 98. This results in failure
of any attempt to use host names, whether it be in a browser
or any other internet software. If you find that you can
ping or tracert to any site from the Command
Prompt using an IP number, but you are unable to ping
or tracert to any host name, then this is probably
the problem.
The cause of this common misconfiguration is usually due
to your system being connected to a local area network (LAN),
using an ethernet card. Domain Name Service settings for
ethernet cards override settings for dialup connections,
and unless the DNS servers on your network are functional,
host lookups will fail, even when you are connected to River
City Internet.
Another cause is that you or someone with access to your
computer has configured or enabled DNS in the global TCP/IP->Dialup
Adaptor item in Control Panel / Network.
Windows 98 will alert you with a warning if you attempt
to do so, but Windows 95 will not, which is why the problem
is most common on Windows 95 systems. TCP/IP settings for
the Dial-Up Adaptor will override any settings for individual
dial-up networking icons.
The simplest way to resolve this problem is to uninstall,
then reinstall the TCP/IP networking component. It may not
be enough to simply edit the properties for TCP/IP->Dialup
Adaptor, as once it is configured, the settings tend
to be "sticky", even when items in it are deactivated. NOTE:
You will require your Windows 95/98 CD-ROM for the following
procedure. To uninstall TCP/IP:
- Open the Start menu.
- Click on Settings.
- Click on Control Panel.
- Double click on Network.
- Highlight the TCP/IP->Dialup Adaptor item
and press the Remove button.
- Follow the prompts to complete the removal process.
- Once back on the Network Properties window,
press OK to close the window. You will be prompted
to restart the computer. Press OK to restart.
To reinstall TCP/IP:
- Open the Start menu.
- Click on Settings.
- Click on Control Panel.
- Double click on Network.
- Click the Add button.
- The Select Network Component Type window appears.
- Click once to highlight the Protocol item.
- Click the Add button.
- In the Select Network Protocol window, click
the Microsoft item in the section on the left
called Manufacturers.
- Click the TCP/IP item in the section on the
right called Network Protocols.
- Click OK.
- Unless you need them for LAN connectivity, if they
are displayed in the "installed network components"
list, remove Client for Netware Networks, IPX/SPX-compatible
protocol, and NetBEUI, by highlighting each
item in turn and clicking the Remove button.
- Once the installation is complete, click OK
in the network box. You will be prompted to restart
the computer again - click OK. If not, restart
it anyway via Start, Shutdown and Restart
the computer.
When the computer comes back up, open My Computer,
double click on Dial-Up Networking, and remove any
dial-up networking icons by right clicking on them and clicking
on Delete. Now we need to re-create our River City
Internet dialup icon.
- Double click on Make New Connection. This will
launch the Dial-Up Connection wizard that asks a few
questions.
- The Make New Connection window appears.
- Type a name for the computer you are dialling
- Enter River City Internet
- Select a modem
- If you have only one modem installed, it will
already appear in the field. If you have more than
one modem, use the selector to choose the modem
you wish to use to dial River City Internet.
Click on Next.
- Windows now requests phone number details.
- Area code
- Unless you are calling from interstate, leave
this field blank.
- Telephone number
- Enter the telephone number for a River City Internet POP
(point of presence) which has local call access
for your area.
- Country code
- Leave this at the default setting. If your system's
regional settings have been configured correctly,
then United States of America (1) should
already be highlighted
Click Next.
- You will be informed that you have successfully created
a dialup connection.
- Click on Finish to complete the wizard.
- You will now have an icon called River City Internet
in the Dial-Up Networking window.
Finally, we need to adjust the River City Internet connection
properties.
- With your right mouse button, click once
on the newly created River City Internet icon.
- A popup menu will appear. Highlight the last item
called Properties and click once with the right
mouse button.
- The River City Internet properties sheet will
appear with three tabs; General, Server Types
and Scripting. Earlier versions of Windows may
not have the Scripting item, and Windows 98 will
have an additional tab. Both of these differences can
be ignored as none of these tabs will be used.
- In the General tab, uncheck the item labeled
- Use country code and area code
- Click the Server Types tab. The settings for
the items on this sheet are as follows:
- Type of Dial-Up Server
- PPP: Windows ... Internet (the exact wording
will depend on the version of windows you are running)
- Log onto network
- unchecked
- Enable software compression
- checked (you may wish to uncheck this if
you typically download mostly files which are already
compressed - graphics and zip files, for example)
- Require encrypted password
- unchecked
- Enable data encryption (Windows 98 only)
- unchecked
- In the Allowed network protocols section, make
sure that both NetBEUI and IPX/SPX Compatible
are both unchecked, and that TCP/IP is
checked.
- Click on the TCP/IP Settings button next to
the TCP/IP checkbox item. The TCP/IP Settings sheet
will be displayed.
- The default settings are usually correct, however
it is worth checking to ensure that the following settings
are active:
- Server assigned IP address
- Server assigned name server addresses
- Use IP header compression (on)
- Use default gateway on remote network (on)
- Click OK to close the TCP/IP Settings
box.
- Click OK to close the River City Internet
Properties sheet.
Reinstallation is now completed, and hopefully DNS host
and domain lookups will now work when you are next connected
to River City Internet.
Problems discussed here are related specifically to web browsing.
Some problems manifest themselves in your web browser, but
in fact may be a general communications problem, so information
in the previous section may be relevant to your problem.
- When I press the Search button, I get the message
that the URL http:/// is unknown and cannot be displayed.
- This is a known problem that is specific to Microsoft
Internet Explorer 3.01 that is delivered with some versions
of Microsoft Windows 95. Unfortunately, Microsoft do not
provide a fix for it any more as IE3 is no longer supported,
and recommend updating to a later version of Internet Explorer
(We at River City Internet recommend Internet Explorer 5
or Netscape Communicator 4.5 or later for full enjoyment
of your web browsing experience, so this is not such a bad
idea).
Does this mean that your web browser has no searching capability?
No. It just means that this functionality is not
accessible via the browser's search button. In the location
bar type http://www.rivercityinternet.com
(the River City Internet home page), and select the
Search button from the menu at the top of the page.
This will present a list of the most popular search engines
available on the internet, or you can use the panel on the
right for keyword search.
-
- What does URL mean?
- Understanding this term is essential if you wish to browse
the world wide web. URL is an acronym for Universal
Resource Location, often coined as a web address
of a page, program or other resource that can be accessed
from your web browser. The location or address
bar displayed by your browser shows the URL for the page
you are viewing, and you can type in a URL that will bring
up a page at that location for viewing or download.
While web pages are one type of URL, they are not the only
type of URL you will encounter. Most web pages start with
the familiar http:// which indicates that the URL
is of a type that is transferred to your computer using
the HyperText Transfer Protocol, but that is only
one type of many possible that are supported by most browsers.
Other common URL protocols are ftp:// File Transfer
Protocol, news:// Usenet News, https://
Secure HyperText Transfer Protocol and so on.
The URL was invented as a way of unambiguously defining
resources available on the internet. It defines not only
where that resource is, but how to get it.
The format of a URL is protocol://server_hostname/path_to_hostname.
- When I click on a link from a page, or enter a URL
that a friend gave me into the location bar I get HTTP
Error 404 - what does that mean?
- Basically, it means that the file or resource you are
requesting cannot be found by the remote server. The first
thing to do is to check to make sure that you have typed
the URL correctly. The smallest mistypings can make a difference
between success or failure. Getting 404 errors from
links obtained via search engines is unfortunately common,
a phenomenon known humorously as link rot, where
the search engine is not updated as frequently as page locations,
or pages are removed from a server but the search engine
links remain until they expire in perhaps 6 months time.
Sometimes a browser will report an HTTP 404 error,
when a browser on a different system will bring up a resource
at that address. This is particularly common with older
browsers, such as Microsoft Explorer version 2 and
Netscape Navigator version 2, which do not understand
redirections and other new features introduced into later
revisions of the Hypertext Transfer Protocol. The "file
not found" error reported by these browsers is a fallback,
since it does not understand what the remote site is actually
asking it to do. Try loading http://www.ibm.com/ for example
using one of these older browsers; you'll see something
entirely different from those of us with up to date browsers!
This is why River City Internet recommends strongly
that you upgrade your browser software to the latest and
greatest offerings. There may be some users, though, who
run very old computers, where resources to run these newer
programs may not be available. If you are considering upgrading,
you do not have to spend megabucks on downloading it from
the internet! Many internet and computer magazines, software
packages and giveaway CD-ROMs from various sources (such
as those supplied with modems) come with reasonably up to
date browsers. Each issue of the popular PCWeek magazine
is accompanied by a CD-ROM with the latest browser versions
for Win32 environments. Various Linux distribution CD-ROMs
come with native versions of Netscape and/or Internet Explorer
for UNIX.
- When I open some URLs, I am asked for a name and password.
What should I type?
- Some sites require you to "log in" before you can view
them. The site may contain sensitive or privileged information,
or be an adults only site. Usually you will need to provide
credit card details or come to some arrangement with the
owners of the site for access.
- When I open a site, I get HTTP 401 error - forbidden.
Did I do something wrong?
- No. You just requested something that the server has been
forbidden to send you. Usually this is because automatic
directory indexes have been disabled (that is, remote sites
are not allowed to view the contents of a directory) when
there is no default document for the directory. This is
usually a configuration error on the server, or simply that
the pages intended for the site have been removed or not
yet uploaded.
Problems described here relate to email - both the collection
of email to you, and sending email to others. Unfortunately,
there is no easy way to define methods of fixing mail problems
that relate to problems in configuration of your machine since
our users run a variety of mail client or reader software,
and they all differ considerably in how they are set up and
maintained.
We can, however, describe how to
access the configuration area for some of the more popular
email packages. Many of these packages, particularly those
made by Microsoft, are tied to dial-up networking and will
attempt to connect to the internet when you start them up.
If you get the option to do so, select Work Off-line
when starting these programs. This will allow you to configure
the program without having to do so while connected to River
City Internet.
- The mail program complains that my username and password
or wrong and is unable to collect my email.
- Your mail name and password are identical to your River
City Internet login name and password. Both are case sensitive.
Make sure that your CAPSLOCK key is not depressed, and be
sure to enter your mail username in all lower case. If the
password contains mixed case (most do), then ensure that
you have typed it correctly.
Do NOT include the @mach3ww.com part in your
mail user name. Also, be sure to read the prompts in the
incoming mail server configuration area correctly; the phrase
mail server name in the Netscape Messenger
area, for example, refers to your user name, and not the
name of the mail host you wish to collect your mail from
(note that this particular prompt has been modified to be
less ambiguous in Netscape 4.5 and later).
-
- When I send mail, I am told it failed because relaying
is not allowed. What does this mean?
- In order to send mail using River City Internet's mail
server, you must be connected directly to the River City
Internet network. You are probably trying to read and
write mail from a machine that is connected elsewhere; from
your college or university, workplace, or while connected
to another internet service provider.
The reason why River City Internet denies relaying
(that is, sending mail from outside the network to some
address that is also outside of our network) is to prevent
our mail server from abuse by spam email senders and attempts
to forge mail by attempting to make it appear legitimate
by sending via our mail server. SPAM is a general
term which, when applied to email, means junk mail;
advertising or similar material which are sent in bulk to
sometimes up to tens of thousands of individual email addresses.
We do not appreciate such abuse of our service, and therefore
prevent such use.
You can still read your email from outside of the River
City Internet network by configuring your mailer's incoming
mail server to pop3.mach3ww.com. However, you
will need to send outbound mail via your local intranet
mail server, or your other service provider's mail server.
-
- When I try to collect mail, the connection is terminated
with the message that the mailbox is currently locked.
- This occurs from time to time when you are downloading
an unusually large mail item and the connection is terminated
abnormally. If you encounter this, contact our helpdesk
to remove the mailbox lock and make your mail available
again.
-
- When I attempt to download mail, my mail program stops
receiving after XX% and it can't retrieve any more.
- This problem is specific to older/slower computers and
is indicative of a general problem in downloading to your
computer. Basically, your computer cannot receive information
from your modem at full speed, and loses information. The
download gets stuck when your computer asks our server to
resend, but the resend requests never reach the server.
This problem will also affect downloading any information
from the internet, including web graphics and downloading
files via ftp.
The long term solution to this problem is to upgrade your
computer to a faster, more modern system which will have
better capacity for communications.
A short term solution is to reduce the speed of communications
between your modem and computer: If it is set at 115200,
then try 57600, if at 57600, try 38400. Baud rate may be
modified from the General properties sheet of your
River City Internet connection icon in My Computer
/ Dial-Up Networking, and pressing the Configure
button next to the modem selector. After making this change,
you will need to hang up (if you are still connected) and
dial again.
-
- When I receive mail I am told I am receiving it, but
my inbox still appears to be empty
- This problem arises when your inbox has been
corrupted somehow, usually by your system being turned off
or losing power while receiving mail, or because your computer
has "crashed" during a mailbox operation (some of which
happen automatically if you have enabled checking for mail
every few minutes while connected).
Microsoft supply a tool to rectify this problem, called
the Inbox Repair Tool.
- Close down your mail reading program if it is currently
open.
- Click on Start on your taskbar.
- Click on Programs.
- Click on Accessories.
- The item you are looking for will be either in the
System Tools submenu or Internet Tools.
Once you find it, click on it.
- Enter the path name to your inbox. If you do not know
it, then you will have to locate it first:
- Click on Start.
- Click on Find.
- Click on Files or Folders...
- The Find, All Files dialog should appear.
- In the Named field, enter *.pst.
- In the Look in field, use the slider to
select My Computer.
- Click once on Find Now.
- Your system will be scanned for files ending in
.pst and will display the results in the
list below.
- You need to check all of the files found in turn,
so repeat the mailbox fix procedure for each file
found. The "path" of each file is the folder name,
followed by a backslash, followed by the filename.
For example, if "mailbox.pst" was found in C:\MSOffice\Mail,
then enter C:\MSOffice\Mail\mailbox.pst into
the "name of file you want to scan" field in the
Inbox Repair Tool.
- Enter the name of the mailbox file.
- Press the Start button on the Inbox Repair
Tool dialog.
- Progress should be displayed, and any errors found
displayed.
- Repeat this procedure for each mailbox located via
Find in item 6.
- When I try to collect my mail, the mail program says
that pop3.mach3ww.com cannot be found and has no DNS
entry.
- This is another manifestation of one of the problems described above in the Communications
Problems section. It means that the internet hostname lookup
function is malfunctioning on your system. Refer to that
section for solutions.
-
- My friend can't send me a file by email. It is returned
to him with a message that it is too large or my disk quota
is exceeded.
- To provide a fair use of our mailbox resource, we limit
the amount of mail you can receive in your mailbox to around
five megabytes. This ensures that one user cannot fill our
mailbox area and cause complete loss of email service to
all other users. As sometimes happens on the internet, you
may annoy another "internet citizen" so much (for whatever
reason) that they attempt to annoy you by transmitting huge
files to your mailbox - this safeguard prevents that from
happening as well. While this might prevent you receiving
further mail from any other user, it will have no impact
on other users of our service. This is only fair.
Consequently, the maximum size of any individual mail item
you may receive is limited to five megabytes. Bear in mind
that email was not really originally designed for transfer
of files, and that it is a very inefficient way to do so.
You may find yourself in the same situation, trying to send
large files to someone else.
- I have received a cryptic message from MAILER-DAEMON
or Postmaster. What do I do with it?
- These messages look confusing to a new internet user,
but they are actually informing you of something concerning
the delivery of your email. If you have mistyped an email
address, or attempted to send to a mailbox which has been
closed, you will find in the message some indication of
what the problem was. Look for user unknown or host
unknown, for example. Sometimes mailboxes become full
(see previous question) so your message cannot be delivered.
Sometimes a remote mail server may be down for an extended
period, so you will first get a message from our mail server
that your message cannot be delivered after 4 hours of trying
(don't worry, it will keep trying for some time yet so don't
resend right away), and finally if the remote server either
cannot or will not accept your mail after 5 days, then it
will be returned to you.
- I keep getting messages from Postmaster with the subject
DSN: Receipt of Mail.
- This is a notification (DSN means "Delivery Service Notification")
that your message has been delivered into the destination
mailbox by a mail server. This is normal, and believe it
or not, it is what you requested.
If you do not want to receive receipts for all mail you
send, you need to turn them off. In Netscape Messenger,
select the Return Receipts category under Mail &
Newsgroups and reconfigure according to your wishes. Other
mail programs may have similar options.
While DSN notification messages can be useful in some circumstances,
you can only use them as positive notification of delivery
when you get a receipt in your mailbox, but you cannot assume
that their absence means that the message was not delivered.
A lot of mail server software does not support DSN, and
many mail readers ignore the receipt request, either because
they do not support it or because the user has requested
them not to be sent.
-
- When I ask Outlook or Outlook express to get my mail,
the modem hangs up and starts to dial again!
- This question is answered
in full in the Connection Problems section above.
This category of refers to problems you may be having with
either your operating system (e.g. Windows 95) or programs
which run on it. These problems are by far the most difficult
to resolve, especially over the phone; to successfully resolve
them, you almost always need someone with some technical expertise
to locate the problem and apply a fix. This difficulty arises
mainly because of the large number of possible causes.
Technically, problems in this area are out of our realm, but
do not hesitate in contacting our
help desk for assistance. We may not be able to solve the
problem for you (but sometimes we can!), but at least we might
be able to offer some guidance as to what course of action
you should follow to get it resolved. Certainly we will try
to help you as much as we are able.
- When I run my browser/mail program or try to send mail,
I get a window saying that there has been a General
Protection Fault.
- An exact cause, and therefore a definite fix, is extremely
difficult to diagnose in this case. Usually, this occurs
because either a program or its configuration/data files
have been corrupted, or because the Windows registry has
become corrupted. The causes of this corruption are many,
but include not shutting your system down correctly (via
Start/Shutdown) or due to a power failure
or system crash. Or perhaps your hard disk has developed
problems; in which case sometimes the problem cannot be
resolved without replacing it.
General Protection Faults are not normal on a well functioning
system. They may be caused by badly behaved software packages
(be careful about what software you choose to install on
your system!), or a problem related to hardware. Anyone
who has to diagnose the problem successfully will have to
become familiar with your system, and try to track down
exactly how to cause it to crash, then determine why it
is crashing, and finally apply a fix.
Windows is not alone in experiencing this class of problem,
of course. UNIX systems will complain about "segmentation
violation" or "illegal instruction" traps, and so on. All
computer systems are subject to malfunction from time to
time, whether it be due to software or hardware, or a combination
of both. Just as with health problems, they can not often
be solved by the layman and require an expert to offer advice
or fix the problem.
We fully understand any frustration you may feel as a result
of this type of problem arising. Anyone who has used computers
for a reasonable length of time will have encountered it,
so while we may not be able to provide you with a solution
to your problem, we do fully sympathize with your situation.
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