I can't sign in to microsoft using a public Wi-Fi - visual-studio

I have connected to public Wi-Fi that probably blocks me from some sites. I installed a vpn that enables me access those blocked website but I still can't sign in to Microsoft.
I recently installed a new Windows 10, when I downloaded Visual Studio web Installer, it wasn't installing because it couldn't download the files using the public wifi, while with the same wifi, I downloaded and installed Visual Studio onthe previous Windows 10 that I was using.
I dont know if the problem is from the new Windows 10 or the WiFi's firewall rules have been elavated.

You can try installing it with open DNS.
For that, open your CMD, type ipconfig/all
there, look for your ipv4 address, default gateway and subnet and note it.
Now go to your Control Panel -> Network and Sharing -> Select the network/wifi you're connected to,
enter image description here
Click on properties, look for the ipv4 checkbox and click on it, then advance.
There you need to select the option to manually enter ip address. Now add that IP address, default gateway, and subnet mask you noted before.
Add DNS manually and set values to : 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4.
Enjoy surfing the net!

Related

Not able to add External Virtual Switch in Hyper-V to connect Android Emulator to Network

I am using Hyper-V to run Visual Studio emulator for android to test Xamarin android app. But emulator is not able to connect to database machine (for making database calls) on same network whereas my computer can access that database.
I have searched a lot on internet but no luck. Even I am not able to add new External Virtual Switch in hyper-v. In my network setting I can see 2 network adapters. One is my physical adapter(Ethernet) to which my computer is connected using LAN cable (Realtek PCIe GBE Family Controller) and second one is vEthernet connected using (Hyper-V Virtual Ethernet Adapter).
Below is the screen shot of hyper-v setting pane of my kit-kat emulator.
It is showing only one switch (window phone emulator switch) not the Realtek Pci Switch. Also I am not able to add a new switch (external switch in hyper-v ) here. Button remains disabled.
Please help me to sort out this. Thanks
I figured out the solution while reading an article for this. For External switch to be added for Hyper-V, we must have Hyper-V Extensible Virtual Switch in our network adapter settings as shown below:
If it is not present then you can add it from install button. It will open a popup window, select Protocol there as shown below.
Once it is added, now you will see External Switch option will be enabled in Hyper-V.

Why can't Visual Studio 2013 see the Remote Debugger running on my Surface?

I am trying to install and run my Windows Store app on a real Surface RT device. I have installed the Remote Debugger for ARM and its running, with no authentication on 4018.
Visual Studio fails to see the device, fails to connect and deploy.
In Windows on the desktop, I cannot ping and my port-query tool says 4018 is down, the host is unreachable.
What can I do? Why didn't they just use USB like Windows Phone development?
Microsoft don't tell you this, but you need to configure some firewall rules for the device to become visible on the network. Of course, you won't find anything by searching for "firewall" from the Start screen, but it can be found as a Snap-in for MMC.
You could turn the firewall off for the Private Profile, i.e. your local, private home network, since your home router already has a firewall and the one in Windows is just there to annoy people; cause family members to call and interrupt your dinner while they struggle to get things working on their budget new Windows 8 laptops (with no touch screen), or you could set the right rules manually.
However there's an easier way, turn on the oh-so-discoverable - especially on a tablet that's not even supposed to even have a desktop - "Network discovery and file sharing" by opening Windows (file) Explorer and clicking on the Network node on the left. A bar will pop up to remind you that Windows is getting in the way and that you can click it to make stuff work again; this configures the firewall for you.
Note that turning on "Network discovery..." via the option under Control Panel > Network Sharing Blah > Instantly-forgettable Name doesn't work. No one knows why.
By now you should be able to ping you device and the port is open, just in time for your battery to have gone flat.
Important Edit
Today, its not working again and pop-up doesn't appear again so I cannot try the same trick. My port query tool says the port is not open (it was the other day).
So I tried this, but its not working for me.
# Elevated Command Prompt #
netsh advfirewall firewall add rule name="RemoteDebugger" dir=in action=allow protocol=TCP port=4018
That says 'Ok.' but the port isn't open.
So I went into MMC and added the Firewall snap-in and its enabled itself again for the Private profile.
Then I noticed that it doesn't turn off. If you flip it to Off and hit Apply, it does nothing!!
There are now two inbound rules for the Remote Debugger, the one I setup and another for the executable. Still, doesn't work.
This thread:
http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_rt-networking/possible-windows-firewall-bug-on-surface-rt-blocks/caa8b40c-dacc-4d19-a751-7a04f8ef00e4
There's an answer stating:
Open Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Windows Firewall with Advanced Security.
Click "Windows Firewall Properties" in the main frame
In each of the three tabs of Domain, Private and Public Profile:
1) Note that: If you change "Firewall state", or change "Inbound connections" to "Allow" (inbound connections that do not match a rule are allowed), it is not going to work. The change is immediately lost after you click "OK" or "Apply" to close the dialog box.
2) What you need to do is: click Protected network connections: "Customize", it will show another dialog box, in which you can deselect some network connections. In this case, you can uncheck "Wireless" and leave "Bluetooth" on.
Once you finish step 3, Action Center will pop up an alert, saying Windows Firewall is off or not using recommended settings. You can ignore this alert, or turn it off in "Change Action Center settings".
Though someone on that thread confirm it had worked, it hasn't for me.
Luke

Access to XAMPP from Bluestacks

How can I open my localhost (in Windows 8 with XAMPP) webpage, from a browser installed in Bluestacks App Player?
Thank you
Type Win+R (To open Run)
Open cmd
type ipconfig
You will get IP address in Ipv4 Address field.
Note: The IP will reset on connection reset/restart
OR
You can access localhost from Bluestacks by 10.0.2.2
use your local ip ex:192.168.1.101
Follow the tutorial on this link: HOW TO ACCESS TO XAMPP FROM BLUESTACKS.
It will guide you explicitly on how to install looback adapter on Windows and configure your IP.
Step 1: Install Microsoft Loopback Adapter in Network Connection Manager
To install the Loopback adapter in Windows Vista, 7, 8, Server 2008 or Server 2012:
Click Start, then type cmd in the search box.
When cmd.exe appears, right-click it and choose Run as administrator.
In the command prompt, type hdwwiz.exe and press Enter.
Click Next.
Select Install the hardware that I manually select from a list (Advanced), then click Next.
Select Network adapters, then click Next.
Select Microsoft as the manufacturer, select Microsoft Loopback Adapter as the adapter, then click Next.
Select Next to confirm the installation.
Select Finish to complete the installation.
To configure the newly created adapter:
Click Start > Control Panel > Network Connections.
Select the newly created connection (named Local Area Connection #, where # is its order number).
Right-click on the selected connection and choose Properties from the menu.
Confirm that Microsoft Loopback Adapter or Microsoft Loopback Adapter # is displayed in the Connect Using: field.
If it is not, return to step 2 and retry properties for another adapter.
Deselect everything except Internet Protocol (TCP/IP).
Select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), and click Properties to open Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Properties.
Select Use the following IP address. Fill in the IP address and Subnet mask fields.
Example: 192.168.1.10, 255.255.255.0
Click Advanced to open Advanced TCP/IP Settings.
Switch to WINS and select Disable NetBIOS over TCP/IP.
Click OK to close Advanced TCP/IP Settings.
Click OK to close the Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Properties.
(Windows XP only) Deselect Notify me when this connection has limited or no connectivity to remove the connection warning icon from the system notification area.
Click OK to close the connection properties.
You will find screenshots in the tutorial from the above mentioned link. It worked for me sure it helps.
Install windows loopback adapter as a virtual ethernt. Set the IP addrs.

Can't start hostednetwork

When I try to run netsh wlan start hostednetwork, I get the following message:
C:\Windows\system32>netsh wlan start hostednetwork
The hosted network couldn't be started.
The group or resource is not in the correct state to perform the requested operation.
I'm running this with admin privileges, so it's not the notorious
C:\Users\Kevin>netsh wlan start hostednetwork
You must run this command from a command prompt with administrator privilege.
How do I get the hosted network "in the correct state"?
This happen after you disable via Control Panel -> network adapters -> right click button on the virtual connection -> disable
To fix that go to Device Manager (Windows-key + x + m on windows 8, Windows-key + x then m on windows 10), then open the network adapters tree , right click button on Microsoft Hosted Network Virtual Adapter and click on enable.
Try now with the command netsh wlan start hostednetwork with admin privileges. It should work.
Note: If you don't see the network adapter with name 'Microsoft Hosted Network Virtual Adapter' try on menu -> view -> show hidden devices in the Device Manager window.
Let alone enabling the network adapter under Device Manager may not help. The following helped me resolved the issue.
I tried Disabling and Enabling the Wifi Adapter (i.e. the actual Wifi device adapter not the virtual adapters) in Control Panel -> Network and Internet -> Network Connections altogether worked for me. The same can be done from the Device Manager too. This surely resets the adapter settings and for the Wifi Adapter and the Virtual Miniport adapters.
However, please make sure that the mode is set to allow as in the below example before you run the start command.
netsh wlan set hostednetwork mode=allow ssid=ssidOfUrChoice key=keyOfUrChoice
and after that run the command netsh wlan start hostednetwork.
Also once the usage is over with the Miniport adapter connection, it is a good practice to stop it using the following command.
netsh wlan stop hostednetwork
Hope it helps.
First off, when I went into cmd and typed "netsh wlan show drivers", I had a NO for hosted network support too. Doesn't matter, you can still do it. Just not in cmd.
I think this problem happens because they changed the way hosted networks work in windows 10. Don't use command line.
Just go on your pc to settings>Network>Mobile Hotspot and you should see all the necessary settings there. Turn it on, set up your network.
If it's still not working, go to Control panel>Network and Internet>Network and Sharing Center>Change Adapter Options> and then click on the properties of the network adapter that you want to share. Go to the sharing tab, and share that internet connection, selecting the name of the adapter you want to use to share it with.
I encountered this problem on my laptop. I found the solution for this problem.
Test this command in the command prompt "netsh wlan show driver".
See Hosted network supported.
If it is no,
Then do this
Go to device manager.
Click on view and press on "show hidden devices".
Go down to the list of devices and expand the node "Network Devices" .
Find an adapter with the name "Microsoft Hosted Network Virtual Adapter" and then right click on it.
Select Enable
This will enable the AdHoc created connection, it should appear in the network connections in Network and Sharing Center, if the AdHoc network connection is not appear then open elevated command prompt and apply this command "netsh wlan stop hostednetwork" without quotations.
After this, the connection should appear.
Then try starting your connection. It should work fine.
First check if your wlan card support hosted network and if no update the card driver. Follow this steps
1) open cmd with administrative rights
2) on the black screen type: netsh wlan show driver | findstr Hosted
3) See Hosted network supported, if No then update drivers
Symptoms
You install an application that uses Microsoft Virtual WiFi technology on a computer that is running Windows 7 or Windows Server 2008 R2. However, the application does not work after the computer restarts. Additionally, you receive an error message that resembles the following:
The hosted network couldn't be started. The group or resource is not in the correct state to perform the requested operation.
Cause
This issue occurs because the Virtual Wi-Fi filter driver does not create the Virtual Wi-Fi Adapter correctly when a PNP resource rebalance occurs during the startup process.
Notes
1.This issue may occur when a Plug and Play (PNP) resource rebalance occurs during the startup process. The PNP resource rebalance is usually triggered by a change to the hardware configuration.
2.If you open Device Manager when this issue occurs, you notice that the Virtual WiFi Adapter is not created.
If you can't restart your hostednetwork after rebooting the OS ,just Try this hotfix .It fixed my problem. Or try to figure it out by yourself according to the Symptoms and Cause mentioned at the start of my answer.
Often, I've found that the solution to this problem can be fixed by disabling and then enabling the Wifi hardware. I've made a script to do this automatically instead of doing it manually by going to the device manager. You can find it here
Some fixes I've used for this problem:
Check if the connection you want to share is shareable.
a. Press Win-key + r and run ncpa.cpl
b. Right click on the connection you want to share and go to properties
c. Go to sharing tab and check if sharing is enabled
Run devmgmt.msc from the run console.
a. Expand the network adapters list
b. Right click -> properties on the adapter of the connection you want to share
c. Go to power management tab and enable allow this computer to turn off this device to save power. Restart your laptop if you've made changes.
Check if airplane mode is disabled. You can enable airplane mode and then turn on the wi-fi, you can never know. Do disable airplane mode if it is on.
Use admin command prompt to run this command.
If none of the above answers worked for you, You can try the following solution which worked for me.
Go to Services manager(services.msc) and enable the below services and try again.
WLAN AutoConfig
Wi-Fi Direct Services Connection Manager Service
Hope this solved your problem.
The hosted network won't start if there are other active wifi adapters.
Disable the others whilst you're starting the hosted network.
Fixed by installing "Wifi Direct Access Point". HostedNetwork is not well supported by some Windows 10 drivers.

Cannot connect Windows Phone Emulator to Internet when using Wireless adapter on the host

I’m developing Windows Phone app using VS2012 on Dell XPS 15 laptop with Win8 pro.I read a lot of troubleshooting articles here (specially Windows Phone 8 emulator can't connect to the internet) and in other places on the web and have not managed to solve the issue (see the subject). Note my laptop gets successfully IP using DHCP on both adapters (wireless and wired) and no MAC filtering is set on the router. Here is the story:
1) Does not work: When starting WP emulator, it does not get IP from
router (DHCP)
2) Works:
start over (delete virtual switches and machine in Hyper-v)
disable wireless adapter
connect wired adapter to router with cable
start emulator (it creates machine and switches)
gets IP and Internet is accessible
3) Does not work:
start over (delete virtual switches and machine in Hyper-v)
disable wired adapter– windows control panel shows : Bluetooth and
Wireless enabled and wired disable – no others
start emulator (it creates machine and switches)
result:
a) router log shows “DHCP server received REQUEST”
b) on the host I see (ipconfig) virtual switch gets IP (vEthernet
(Intel(R) Centrino(R) Wireless-N 1030 Virtual Switch)) – it selected
as “Windows Phone Emulator External” in virtual machine settings
c) in emulator network tab of “Additional Tools” window I see adaptors
with default IP 169.*
3) Partially works:
delete virtual switches
disable wired adapter– windows control panel shows : Bluetooth and
Wireless enabled and wired disable – no others
create internal switch in hyper-v named “Windows Phone Emulator
Internal Switch” and select it in internal network adapter of virtual
machine
enable sharing in wireless adapter (in control panel)
start emulator as standalone with xde.exe (starting from VS will not
use right snapshot with deployed app) and does not allow it to
connect to network – loading takes much more time and after that, OS
is loading and emulator shows error dialog “Some functionality maybe
disables”
it possible to use emulator with Internet, but device buttons does
not work – use keyboard shortcuts
(http://devatheart.azurewebsites.net/2011/06/04/windows-phone-7-emulator-and-physical-keyboard-shortcuts/)
it cannot be used for debugging – it is good only for showing the app on public ;-)
You have answered your question but this may help.
connect with your wireless network
host the wireless connection using netsh in CMD. an alternative is creating an internal switch sharing your connection with your lan adapter
you can do that with connectify too.
by now, your PC should show you are both connected to a wireless and lan network.
run the emulator from visual studio and you get connected.

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