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If no other solution pops up you could carry out a repair installation of Vista rather than a clean installation with formatting. Start up the system with the disc as with a normal installation and choose to repair the existing Windows instead of making a full replacement installation. I haven't carried out these precise steps with Vista myself yet, but assume that it behaves the same as WinXP.
Edit: There should be third party tools that can handle changing of those settings for you.
The settings are also in the registry under the following key, and with a little the system accepts changes without requiring a reboot. I'll experiment a bit and write more if I notice anything perticular.
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Servic es\Tcpip\Parameters\Interfaces
Edit 2 I tried changing my DNS server in the registry and it required a reboot to activate. There's probably a way to force the adapter to use all of the changed tcpip settings right away, something in the style of "ipconfig /registerdns" but I don't know, yet.
Edit 3 Changing the settings in the registry and then disabling/enabling the network interface seems to be a usable method.
Last edited by mkk; Mar 2, 2008 at 07:05 AM.
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