I have not thoroughly tested this solution but it seems to have fixed the 2 
cases I have come across.  Go into the network cards properties, click the 
advanced table, look for the Priority and Vlan attribute, then choose Priority 
and Vlan Disabled.  There is another attribute called Vlan that is set to 1 or 
0 in these cases, so perhaps this has something to do it.  I haven't had to do 
anything with Unidentified Networks or anything listed below to resolve their 
issues.

Let the list know if this works for everyone, is just another temporary 
band-aid or if anyone finds a better permanent solution.

Brian

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
Behalf Of Tindall, Dave
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2008 1:36 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Multiple Networks, Unidentified Networks, Default Route 0.0.0.0

Just a wild guess, but at least one device on our campus was solved by this KB 
article, having the symptom of the strange default route.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/928233

Dave Tindall
Asst VP for Technology Services (CIO)
Seattle Pacific University
Computer & Information Systems
Phone: (206) 281-2239
Fax: (206) 281-2850
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Web: http://www.spu.edu<http://www.spu.edu/>

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
Behalf Of SHIH, WENDY
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2008 10:20 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Multiple Networks, Unidentified Networks, Default Route 0.0.0.0

Hi, This is posted on ResNet listserv but not sure if it will work for your 
situation.  What we have found that works for us is by  going to Network 
Sharing Center =>  Customize => View Status and removed all of the Unidentified 
networks.  Then, do a Vista Winsock fix.   It seems to have worked  on those 
PCs that have this issue so far.   Someone just posted below on the ResNet 
listserv but we have not had to do any restore yet.

We have experienced a number of users with MAC address with all 0's.   What is 
interesting in our cases is that the connection device is only viewable through 
IPConfig /all, it is not showing at all in the Vista Network and Sharing 
interface.
We also have not found a consistent solution.
However, a few users have on their own used the restoration disks they had 
which has cleared the issue.

Best regards,



Anthony Smith

Academic Services Computing Information Technology

University at Buffalo

State University of New York

[EMAIL PROTECTED]<mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

tel. 716-645-5362

From: Cisco Clean Access Users and Administrators [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On 
Behalf Of Shaun Pillé
Sent: Thursday, September 04, 2008 12:49 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Multiple Networks, Unidentified Networks, Default Route 0.0.0.0

I have a problem that keeps appearing on randomly on the network. Several Vista 
computers have the same symptoms and are unable to connect to the Internet. In 
the Network and Sharing Center, while connected to the LAN, multiple networks 
are listed with one or more of them being an Unidentified Network.

If I look at the output of "ipconfig /all", the default gateway has two 
addresses, with the first one being 0.0.0.0, and the second one being the Clean 
Access Server for that dorm. If I open a command prompt with administrative 
privilege, and run "route delete 0.0.0.0" followed by an "ipconfig /release" 
and "ipconfig /renew", the multiple networks disappear and the connection 
starts to work. This is only a temporary fix and the problem seems to reappear 
on some computers.

Has anyone seen this error? Is there a permanent fix for this? We are using the 
Clean Access Server as our DHCP server.


Thanks,

Shaun Pillé
Network Manager
Campus Technologies, LLC
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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