if you get a 169 Ip address it can be fixed, but if the fix resort back to the 169 then the card is definitely fried. is this card on board or PCI.
I'm not so sure now you know. To explain let me give a little bit more background information.
The computer was recently added to an office server domain. The users are added as "ordinary" users. When I started the thread, it was because as I said, when both the ethernet cable and the NIC were enabled and physically connected to the computer, the icon for thewireless connection would show that it was connected to the internet, but the icon for the ethernet connection would show that it was "acquiring network address".
Now as I mentioned in another earlier post, I left it for a while, and only went back to try it out yesterday. When I did this, It was to log in as another (ordinary) user. Then a new problem was discovered. Note that at this point the ethernet cable had been disconnected, the wireless card still of course left in, and enabled. When the user tried to connect to the network/internet, it connects, then disconnects, then reconnects withing the space of ten seconds, and keeps doing this. On the back of the tower, the green and amber lights in the back of the card are off one second, on the next, and so on. So drawing from that behaviour, one could say that the card was dodgy. This however does not seem to be the case, as when I log in as the administrator to the computer, the connectivity is FINE!
And the most recent update is, as of today, the user was still having problems when they were logged in with it cutting out and reconnecting erratically, so I sought to recreate the original problem i.e. have both wired and wireless connections, and when I do this, I get the same thing that happened before, wireless works fine, wired stuck on "acquiring network address". Needless to say I didn't try to see what would happen if I disabled the network adapter because the user had to get on with some work!
I know that I've gone on quite a bit, but it's only so that ppl can hopefully fully understand the behaviour. So whilst it could be a busted wireless card (connected through a PCI slot by the way) sometimes, at other times it seems like it's the ethernet cable that has a problem.
Would love to hear more options now, I can confirm that the ethernet cable worked fine on a different computer so I don't think that's the problem. Are there any more steps I can take to try to isolate the cause?