The problem solved.
Hi,
I have been away for a while.
But the solution seems to here now.
I did as
Sebastian Salvino suggested:
For those of you who might want to keep using the provider's name
servers; Change the value of AVAHI_DAEMON_DETECT_LOCAL, wh
on 7/1/2013 10:35 AM Daniel Landau said the following:
> On 2013-07-01 16:07, Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:
>> On 01.07.13 15:56, Daniel Landau wrote:
>> Could you please go to General Screen as mentioned on page 179, section
>> 25.3?
>>
>> Is the domain set to .local? What happens if you put back
On 01.07.13 16:35, Daniel Landau wrote:
The domain is set to zyxel.com. I changed it to landau.fi (which I
control), but this didn't have any noticeable effect. If I change the
DNS to ISP the error returns.
ok, it really looks as the ISP's .local domain issue.
However, with my previous route
On 2013-07-01 16:07, Matus UHLAR - fantomas wrote:
On 01.07.13 15:56, Daniel Landau wrote:
Could you please go to General Screen as mentioned on page 179, section
25.3?
Is the domain set to .local? What happens if you put back your ISP DNS
servers but change domain name to something different? (
On 01.07.13 15:56, Daniel Landau wrote:
I am also a customer of the same ISP (Sonera) and I too have today
gotten a new ZyXEL router and yes, I too now have the same error
message. The proper English language version for the message is:
"Network service discovery disabled
Your current network h
Hi all,
I am also a customer of the same ISP (Sonera) and I too have today
gotten a new ZyXEL router and yes, I too now have the same error
message. The proper English language version for the message is:
"Network service discovery disabled
Your current network has a .local domain, which is not
On Thu, Jun 27, 2013 at 07:26:16PM +0200, Gerard ROBIN wrote:
> Date: Thu, 27 Jun 2013 19:26:16 +0200
> From: Gerard ROBIN
> To: debian-laptop
> Subject: Re: using samsung wave y GT S5380 as modem
> X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 3.3.2 (2011-06-06) on bendel.debian.org
> X-Spam-Level:
> X-
On 30.06.13 21:24, Matthew Dawson wrote:
The most usual reason is that your ISP displays a page when you incorrectly
enter a dns name, displaying an error. OpenDNS does a similar thing by
default (their search page). Google does not. It can be annoying though, as
some software expects a NXDOMA
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