Self-assigned IP help

There's other topics on this thread, but I can't find the answer.
Last night everything was fine. Today, my Airport is self-assigning an IP address and although it can see the wireless network, it can't get out to the internet.
I've turned the Airport on and off, tried to manually renew DHCP lease, and deleted the network preferences plist files but to no avail.
Tried to create a new location but the new location keeps deleting itself.
Any ideas?

I have been having the same issue of the Self-Assigned IP address. I am running an Airport Extreme with an Airport Express connected for iTunes sharing. I have two other macs (iMac G5 and white MacBook) connected to the Airport Extreme as well as a PS3. These two computers and the PS3 are able to access the internet and the network (for printer sharing, iTunes sharing, etc) with out any problems. The only computer with a problem is my iMac G4.
I have tried numerous diagnostics with no luck, including everything posted earlier in this thread. The problem starts out with the iMac G4 showing that my Airport is turned on and has excellent signal strength. When I start up Mail, iChat or Safari I show that I am not connected to the Internet. I then checked System Preferences/Network and the Airport shows that it has a Self-Assigned IP address.
I then unplugged my Airport and cable modem and waited several minutes before plugging them back in. Network settings still showed a Self-Assigned IP. I confirmed that all the other computers were still able to access the Internet.
I then performed maintenance scripts on the iMac G4 as well as using disk utilities to fix any permissions problems (there were some but according to Apple Support they are notifications and can be ignored). I then restarted the iMac G4 and Network settings still showed a Self-Assigned IP.
I went into System Preferences/Network/Advanced/TCP-IP and changed Configure IPv4 from Using DHCP to Manually. I manually entered a 10.0.X.X address, set the subnet mask to match the Airport Extreme and entered the router address all of which I got off of one of the other macs which was connected to the Airport Extreme. I ensured that the 10.0.X.X address I used was not in use. Then clicked okay and Apply.
My Airport now shows Connected with a green dot but I still do not have Internet access. After all of this I re-confirmed that the other computers still had access which they did (hence I can write this post).
I have searched Apple Support as well as the Apple Discussions. I found and tried many possible solutions on posts that sounded very similar but nothing worked.
I am stuck. I don't know what the next step is except to send the iMac G4 to the dump and buy a new computer which I really can't do right now. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Similar Messages

  • Self Assigned IP Addresses amber lights and no internet HELP!

    Ok bear with me as I try to explain my prediciment!
    I have an imac G5 with a Airport Extreme card properly connected and currently at full signal! The problem I'm having is that when i click safari (or IE) it doesn't load up any pages and a littke box pops up saying that it cannot find the server! so I go to network settings in system preferences and check the network status. I have an amber light and it says "airport connected to (my server) IP address self assigned your mac may not be able to connect to the internet" the problem is it is not self assigned it is done through DHCP.
    I have had internet working perfectly at another house and it has worke don the odd occasion for a couple of days here so I don't think its a fault card (as i say it picks up a signal fine). I have tried putting in all info in manually but this has not helped (although on 1 occasion it did). I have baffeled the university technician with this problem. Im currently using ethernet to connect but this is no good as I need the computer in my bedroom and not the dining room (student accomodation) if you have any suggestions or have experienced this problem yourselves i would be delighted to hear of any answers and suggestions!

    Hi,
    Duane is right in that if ACL's (access control lists) are set on the wireless access point, (as they are in my school) you will need your mac address of your airport card to add to the router.
    Here's what I would do.... Open up Network Prefs in the System Prefs app. Create a "New" location and name it whatever you want ("Wireless at Home"). In the "Show" drop down menu, select airport. You should see 5 tabs in the airport window. Airport, TCP/IP, PPoE, Appletalk and Proxies. Click the airport tab and select automatically where it asks you what default network you want to join. You'll also find your mac address for your airport card in that pane. Next, click on TCP/IP and select DHCP from the IPv4: drop down menu, make sure no information is showing in this window. In other words, no numbers in DHCP or DNS servers, etc. If it's blank and ready to go, hit apply. The router should then hand off an IP address. Close system prefs and look in the menu on the upper right hand corner of your screen (by the date and time). See the airport fan? Does it have black bars through it? Or are they grey? Or, does it just look like a blank semicircle (airport is not turned on). If you don't see this menu, go back to network prefs and open the new location you've just made and go back to the airport tab. There is a check box in there that says, show airport status in menu bar. Turn that on. Now, go back to the menu and if the bars are grey, click on the fan and see if your network is listed there. Click on that to join. You have made a new location with fresh DHCP settings and told your airport card to connect automatically to whatever network is available.
    Your tech guy at school is probably a PC head and that's why he's been stumped. He shouldn't be.
    Hope that helps.
    Tim
    Tech Asst
    Bertschi School
    Seattle, WA.
    Power Mac G4 667 Digital Audio   Mac OS X (10.3.8)  

  • Self Assigned IP - Fixed, but help still needed, please

    I'll add a bit of a back story first which I hope will help people understand my issue, but also hopefully lead people with a self-assigned IP issue to a fix (link is within the post)
    I’m on on an iMac 20″ Mid 2007. I recently updated to OSX Lion after having wifi connection issues in Leopard. I used to randomly get kicked off my wifi and given a self assigned IP. With Leopard, the issue was fixed by applying a manual IP, router address etc and restarting. The issue would return months later, but I got over it after a few tantrums.
    Then as soon as I updated to Snow Leopard, I instantly had no internet access and I could only upgrade to Lion if I downloaded system updates. So after a few hours of searching, I toggled my internet sharing ‘on & off’ and that was enough for that fix.
    But then I upgraded to Lion and again, no internet. And nothing worked for me at all, every fix on the internet I tried failed. If my airport ever managed to connect to my router I would get a self assigned IP. Or it would say it was connected but there was no internet. So I hunted for hours and eventually found this:
    Now, here is a fix for anyone who is having the same issue. I hope it works for you!
    http://www.davidpierron.com/index.php/archives/2009/04/13/289/
    This did work for me. The fix is to flush your ipfw through terminal, and it worked for me instantly.
    However, I now have another issue that I really hope people can help me with. It's not as annoying as the above, but my god it's still very annoying!
    Here are some bullets to show the tedious routine I have to go through in order to connect to the internet via my airport.
    • I turn on my mac and my it tries to connect to my router automatically. But after a minute of trying, it says it can’t connect.
    • I select my router manually from the list and have to enter my password manually, even though it is already saved in my Keychain.
    • It then connects and says, ‘Connected but no internet’, so I leave it for two minutes and throw things around the room.
    • After those 2 minutes it connects to the internet. But no, I can’t browse the web as the browser says 'DNS look up failure'.
    • So I open terminal, enter 'sudo ipfw flush' to flush my ipfw and BINGO, I’m online 5 minutes after logging on to my machine.
    The router I am using was only issued to me 8 months ago by my new ISP here in the UK, it connects via WEP and has always been stable for every other device I have connected to it. But I am going to ring up my ISP and see if there is a new router I can get.
    If anyone - ESPECIALLY APPLE who seem to be shying away from admitting there has ever been an airport wifi issue - has any information to advise me, then please let me know.
    Also if you are having a Self Assigned IP address issue and that fix above works, give the man some credit on his blog, and if you know him, give him a kiss from me!
    Thanks

    Update:
    I spoke to my ISP to see if they had any newer routers and if they did WPA now.
    I have a new router on its way and they have updated my router to do WPA!
    The result?
    I now connect to my router automatically after a restart. No issue there.
    However,
    It still can't find the internet when it first connects.
    I still have to wait 2 minutes for it to find the net.
    I still have DNS issues once connected
    I still have to flush ipfw before it works correctly.

  • Help! How do i get rid of self-assigned IP address? Virgin Media & Ibook

    Hey all, first time here. Hoping someone more knowledgeable than me (or the people at virgin!) can help.
    I have home broadband from Virgin as of last night. Self-set up the modem (Cisco), Router (D-link) and connection to my Ibook, running Tiger 10.4.11
    Router and modem seem to be working fine. Green lights all round. Plus last night i had an ethernet connection runnign fine and even got a wireless connection to the Ibook. All good.
    This morning, twenty minutes of internet use, then bumped off. No connection.
    Checked under System Preferences, Network, Airport and got a message saying Airport has 'a self assigned IP address and cannot connect to internet.'
    I assume the problem therefore is with the Ibook talking to the router (sorry, not very technical so 'talking' is best i can do).
    Tried switching off the firewall. Still no joy. Airport can see my router in the list, and even has it first in preferred networks to join list. I get a five bar signal when i select it from Airport but how do i rid the computer of the 'Self-assigned IP address' ?
    Please help, it's driving me mad! Apple blame Virgin, Virgin blame Router manufacturer, Router manufacturer blame Apple. It's an endless circle of **** and call-centres!!!
    Cheers!
    Dan

    Hi Dan, and a warm welcome to the forums!
    "self-assigned IP address" simply means it's not getting an IP from the device responsible for handing out IPs, the Router in your instance.
    Does Ethernet still work fine?
    Go to System Preferences
    Click Network
    Highlight AirPort and click Configure...
    Choose “By default, join: Preferred networks”
    Select your access point and Remove your access point with the minus button.
    Launch your keychain access in Utilities and delete your access point keychain entry.
    Reboot
    Go back to the “By default, join:” page and click the plus this time to add your access point. Enter the correct password, save, reboot.

  • HT4628 My Mac Air OSX10.8.5 won't connect to the internet as it says it has a self assigned IP address and thus cannot connect to the internet. I can only connect to a network by manually typing in the configuration specs. Please help.

    My mac air OSX10.8.5 won't connect to the internet. It says it has a 'self assigned IP address and therefore cannot connect to the internet'. Network diagnostics is unable to the solve the problem. It happened suddenly for no reason and now I cannot connect except by typing in the configuration settings manually. Please help me!

    Use the Airport Utility or log into your wireless device via http and ensure the DHCP/NAT service is enabled.  If accessing via HTTP, you will need to manually set an ip within your local subnet (eg: 192.168.0.x).

  • Help! Self-assigned IP?

    Hello! I'm a new Mac user and I just installed all the updates released today(December 8th, 2009) for my late 2008 unibody Macbook Pro with Snow Leopard installed.
    After the updates, I noticed my clock/date was set back to the year 2000 and a screen came up after reboot that asked me to allow access for "configd." Not knowing what this was and thinking it could be malicious I denied it, and that's when I realized I couldn't connect to the internet using Airport (WIFI) or Ethernet through my ATT DSL line. It keeps saying that I have a "self-assigned IP." I can't access the internet at all(through WIFI or ethernet)so can't download anything.
    I've tried to restart and turn a lot of things off and on with airport and the firewall settings with no luck. Has anyone else experienced these problems? Is something buggy with the updates? How can I fix this?
    I find it very unusual that my date/time would be set to the year 2000 and after the update, and it would affect my internet access. I would hope after an update nothing would get corrupted or ask me something about giving access to "configd" even though many users like me probably have no idea what it is. I wish it wouldn't of asked me that and gave it access automatically.
    Thanks for your time, and I hope to hear from some folks!

    Hi Alex6969,
    Welcome to the Support Communities!  The articles below will help you troubleshoot the issue you are having with your wired ethernet connection.
    Connecting to the Internet via cable, DSL, or local area network (LAN) in Mac OS X v10.6 or later
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT5304
    OS X Mavericks: Choose a manual IP address or use DHCP
    http://support.apple.com/kb/PH14009
    I hope this information helps ....
    - Judy

  • Help! Need to release self assigned IP address

    This is my daughter's CPU...I tried the renew DHCP lease, restarted the iMac (G3, strawberry 266 MHz), cable modem & router and still the stupid static IP address still shows up! I called the ISP and tried many of these standard fixes, I even reinstalled OSX Panther and the problem remains. It used to work well until I put the CPU away for couple of months and when I tried to reconnect through Comcast, it did not. Please help me!!!! >_<<br>
    iMac Intel Core Duo   Mac OS X (10.3)  

    the only thing u can do for a self assigned ip address is power cycle the modem for 5 minutes, make sure the LED lights are out.. some modems have batteries... if that doesnt work try creating a new network location.. if that doesnt work then you will have to call your internet service provider
    you could trying booting to your install disc and running network utility there but yes..

  • Self Assigned IP  169...PLEASE HELP!

    Here's the deal.
    I've been using this iMac like about a month now and the wireless internet(Airport Extreme) worked perfectly. It rained one day and the connection was having drops until it couldn't connect to the internet anymore. And now this frustrating message keeps showing up: Airport has self assigned IP 169.XX....
    and cannot connect to the internet. I have:
    -Turned off the modem and also the computer for minutes and turned them on again.(It connected, but just for 5 seconds. It keeps doing that...)
    -Deleted the airport network and re-made it... Still, the same problem...
    -Changed network settings (Changed IP adress) still nothing. I put it back to automatic.
    - I have reseted the computer several times and nothing.
    Please, could someone help me. I can't use ethernet because the modem is too far away. So please, what is going on?

    Re 1) Setting up a new account won't solve the problem in itself but it will help narrow down the cause. The idea is this: the problem might be caused by something system-wide (e.g. a preference file in /Library/Preferences) or it might be caused by something that is specific to your account (e.g. a preference file in yourhome/Library/Preferences). If we knew which, we could target the troubleshooting appropriately. The easiest way to figure out which is to create a new user, log in as that user and see if the problem remains. If it does, it must be system-wide; if not, it is specific to your account.
    Are you using any firewall software? If you are using Tiger's built-in firewall, how is it configured?
    - cfr

  • HT204210 self assigned ip problem after the latest update !!! help anybody

    I have this stupid problem and don't know what to do . When I try to connect to the wi-fi network at the office I got ''self assigned ip'' and can't connect. At my network at home I have no problems . Any ideas?

    Do you thing this could help ?
    http://www.cnet.com/news/fix-self-assigned-ip-addresses-in-os-x/

  • Self assigned ip address-Could someone help me?

    There are two Powerbooks in my house which connects wirelessly to the internet and an airport express that joins the existing wireless connection.
    When I'am using mine, I can connect without any problem, but when my girlfriend uses her mac we both get the self-assigned ip address. The only way to connect after that is by reseting the router.
    This is what i did in both computers after I read some posts here (BUT THE PROBLEM CONTINUES) and I don't know what else to do:
    "....1. Reset Open Firmware. As you turn on the machine, press & hold CmdOption+OF until you get a screen that says "Welcome to Open Firmware". At the prompt, enter "reset-nvram" (without the quotes). Press return. Enter "reset-all". Press return and the machine will restart.
    2. Open network preferences. In airport, go to advanced. Check the box that says disconnect the wireless network when logging out. (It seems incredible that it would work, but apparently it sometimes does.)
    3. Restart in "Safe" mode (hold down "Shift" while restarting). Once in Safe mode simply restart again in regular mode. http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=306879
    4. Go into your keychain and find the password key for your network. If you connect to a WAP it will be the name of that WAP. Then in the key click on the access control tab. It probably shows selected applications. Change this to "Allow all applications to access this item"........"
    Thanks.
    K.

    My wife's PB G4 was doing the same thing. Worked fine at the Apple Store but had issues on my all Apple network at home. After resetting the routers, recreating the network etc I finally disabled the firewall and all seems to be working.

  • Self-Assigned IP via router - no internet access - HELP!

    Hi all,
    I have 10.5.7 leopard installed on my C2D Macbook.
    In the past, I never had any issues connecting to wireless routers with internet connection.
    As of late, I am currently getting 'Self assigned IP address' which does not allow me to connect to the internet. It is connected to the router, but just no internet access. I can see the other Shared computers (Windows PC and mate's macbook pros) but just no web access. And they do not have a problem connecting to the internet.
    I have attempted the following:
    1) Turned on & off Airport.
    2) Deleted network connections and re-created them, rebooted in safe & PRAM modes.
    3) Deleted router Key chain permissions & changed permissions to 'access all'.
    4) Deleted plist files from /Library/Preferences/SystemConfiguration/
    5) Off Firewall & verified against the logs to ensure it is disabled.
    6) Re-installed 10.5.7 combo updates.
    7) Rebooted router, changed router channel, etc. Router is on the latest Netgear firmware.
    8) Assigned IP address and entered the DNS, router values manually in Leopard.
    9) Clicked on renew DHCP lease several thousands to no avail..
    Occasionally, DHCP will work. But once I reboot & awake the mac the internet connection drops and 'Self Assigned IP' happens.
    Does anyone else have any ideas? My only conclusion is that the bug is in Leopard 10.5.7.

    Make sure your router has the latest firmware. If you are out of range of the WiFI or in a marginal area, this error simply indicates that your computer is not able to access an internet router/server and simply assigns the default IP address which is of the form 169.254.xxx.xxx. Basically it's a flag that lets you know you are not connected to a DHCP server.

  • Apple Mac wireless self-assigned IP address help

    I just got FiOS today.  Everything appears to be working fine except for one thing, my Apple Macbook Pro, running 10.5.8 is getting a self-assigned IP address when I connect it to my FiOS wireless router (ActionTec MI424-WR).
    The Mac has a physical connection to the wireless router.  The "My Network" tab in the wireless router configuration screen shows it as connected, with an assigned IP address of 192.168.1.6.  However, the ping test fails, and the Mac's Airport settings show a self-assigned IP address.
    I've tried rebooting everything, turning airport on and off, and renewing DHCP, but nothing is working.   
    I haven't touched any of the default settings on the ActionTec, it's still running WEP.
    I did verify that my firewall is turned off on the mac.
    What else can I try?
    Solved!
    Go to Solution.

    I have a 6 month old MacBook Pro running the latest version of OS X, so it's affecting newere Macs as well.  I found some on-line discussion that it's a problem with only the Macbook Pro.
    FWIW, a few hours after finally getting it working it happened all over again.  I had wireless connectivity but only got a self-assigned IP address.  I tried shutting the airport on and off, deleting the wireless key from key chain, and clearing the wireless network.  However nothing worked until I rebooted the Mac.
    I then checked the firmware on the ActionTec and found it was 20.8.0 and 20.9.0 was the latest (mind you I just got this router installed today).  I updated to the 20.9.0 release and everything has worked for about the last 6 hours.  Fingers are crossed. :-)

  • Self Assigned IP address – can't figure this out. Frustrated.

    This is a long post but bear with me. It proposes a challenge for the mac connoisseur. Who knows? Might be fun?
    OK, here goes:
    Please help. I have been trying to fix this for about 7 months. I first noticed this issue when I started traveling around the country, from hotel to hotel. While others (PC's and Mac's) had no trouble connecting to the free wifi at these hotels, I did. I kept getting "self-assigned i.p."
    This was extremely frustrating. I often had to call up the i.t. guys and ask them to help me manually put in ip address, subnet mask, router (gateway), and dns. This worked much of the time but not always.
    Let me also say that, sometimes it worked perfectly! I'd say about 25% of the time (at these hotels) my internet worked perfectly – just connected immediately. The other 75... "self-assigned i.p."
    I just spoke to the mac "geniuses" and they told me it's not an issue with my computer at all (either hardware or software). Are you kidding me?!?! How can they explain everyone else's internet working except mine. And I'm talking like 100 or more different hotels in a 4 month period. They were trying to tell me that it was just a coincidence every time! "You'd be surprised" one guy said. Hahaha. They said that the routers aren't accepting my computer's whatever. OK, well WHY?! The router works for everyone but me. It's something wrong with my computer right?! Well no one acknowledged this.
    More background info:Just had my airport card and logic board replaced. Computer came back and the sheet said "passed all hardware tests." BUT, none of my issues (I had other ones too involving battery life and not being able to access certain websites) were fixed.
    I went to an apple store. They told me to do an erase and reinstall or whatever. So I did that (by dragging and dropping everything I'd saved on an external hard drive using disk utility). By the way, I also upgraded from leopard to snow leopard. So now, if I have the same issues after this I'll know both leopard and snow leopard are screwed up.... right?
    OK, so I followed their instructions on deleting and reinstalling to a tee and guess what?! Everything worked! Or so it seemed. Battery fine. Websites now accessible. I figured the airport issue was fixed too. But now that I'm not touring anymore and the airport works in my house, I never encountered any issues. Until now. At my work.
    I got a new job and it's one in which I HAVE to have a computer that connects to the internet. So of course, the same issue with self assigned i.p. presents itself. Everyone else in the office has no problem. Including a Mac person that used to work there.
    I've been reading some other threads that are just completely confusing me. One of them might be the solution but I thought I'd detail my troubles so that some smart computer person out there can diagnose my specific problem and give me a specific fix.
    I noticed that many people believe there was a bug in one of the 10.5 updates. I am pretty quick to install updates (maybe I shouldn't be because I hear that the first updates are often buggy and maybe you should wait for a while). But this problem has continued now with Snow Leopard too so... I don't know. I don't know anything anymore. I have tried everything. And Apple is telling me it's not a problem with my computer. Give me a break.
    One more interesting quirk: before doing the erase and reinstall my computer could not find the Apple Store's network. After the erase and reinstall it works. That's why I assumed everything was fine! But no. And now the Mac people are saying there's no problem because they can't see it.
    BTW, I have tried all the obvious things. It's not an obvious thing. But I mean, if you think it is... then tell me I guess. But I've been in the advanced tab thousands of times. I feel like I've exhausted everything in there.
    Thank you thank you thank you in advance if someone is actually able to solve my issue.

    continuation of console log:
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: npvhash=4095
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: PAE enabled
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: 64 bit mode enabled
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: Darwin Kernel Version 10.2.0: Tue Nov 3 10:37:10 PST 2009; root:xnu-1486.2.11~1/RELEASE_I386
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: vmpagebootstrap: 507215 free pages and 17073 wired pages
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: standard timeslicing quantum is 10000 us
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: migtable_maxdispl = 73
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: AppleACPICPU: ProcessorId=0 LocalApicId=0 Enabled
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: AppleACPICPU: ProcessorId=1 LocalApicId=1 Enabled
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: calling mpopolicyinit for TMSafetyNet
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: Security policy loaded: Safety net for Time Machine (TMSafetyNet)
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: calling mpopolicyinit for Quarantine
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: Security policy loaded: Quarantine policy (Quarantine)
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: calling mpopolicyinit for Sandbox
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: Security policy loaded: Seatbelt sandbox policy (Sandbox)
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1989, 1991, 1993
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: MAC Framework successfully initialized
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: using 10485 buffer headers and 4096 cluster IO buffer headers
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: IOAPIC: Version 0x20 Vectors 64:87
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: ACPI: System State [S0 S3 S4 S5] (S3)
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: mbinit: done (64 MB memory set for mbuf pool)
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: rooting via boot-uuid from /chosen: 5924DB5A-4C9F-323F-BC39-2469AEAB4D18
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: Waiting on <dict ID="0"><key>IOProviderClass</key><string ID="1">IOResources</string> <key>IOResourceMatch</key><string ID="2">boot-uuid-media</string></dict>
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: com.apple.AppleFSCompressionTypeZlib load succeeded
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: AppleIntelCPUPowerManagementClient: ready
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: FireWire (OHCI) TI ID 8025 built-in now active, GUID 001b63fffe8a7584; max speed s800.
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: Got boot device = IOService:/AppleACPIPlatformExpert/PCI0 /AppleACPIPCI/SATA@1F,2/AppleICH8AHCI/PRT0@0/IOAHCIDevice@0/AppleAHCIDiskDriver /IOAHCIBlockStorageDevice/IOBlockStorageDriver/FUJITSU MHW2120BH Media/IOGUIDPartitionScheme/Untitled@2
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: BSD root: disk0s2, major 14, minor 2
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: [Bluetooth::CSRHIDTransition] switchToHCIMode (legacy)
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: [Bluetooth::CSRHIDTransition] transition complete.
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: CSRUSBBluetoothHCIController::setupHardware super returned 0
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: AppleIntelCPUPowerManagement: initialization complete
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: AppleYukon2: Marvell Yukon Gigabit Adapter 88E8055 Singleport Copper SA
    Feb 1 13:08:45 localhost kernel[0]: AppleYukon2: RxRingSize <= 1024, TxRingSize 256, RXMAXLE 1024, TXMAXLE 768, STMAXLE 3328
    Feb 1 13:08:46 localhost kernel[0]: yukon: Ethernet address 00:1b:63:94:9c:ad
    Feb 1 13:08:46 localhost kernel[0]: systemShutdown false
    Feb 1 13:08:47 localhost kernel[0]: NVDANV50HAL loaded and registered.
    Feb 1 13:08:47 localhost kernel[0]: Previous Shutdown Cause: 5
    Feb 1 13:08:47 localhost kernel[0]: Atheros: mac 12.2 phy 8.1 radio 12.0
    Feb 1 13:08:47 localhost kernel[0]: DSMOS has arrived
    Feb 1 13:08:47 localhost kernel[0]: AirPort_AthrFusion: Ethernet address 00:1e:52:77:13:82
    Feb 1 13:08:47 localhost kernel[0]: IO80211Controller::dataLinkLayerAttachComplete(): adding AppleEFINVRAM notification
    Feb 1 13:08:56 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Down on en1. Reason 1 (Unspecified).
    Feb 1 13:09:05 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: Warning - com.apple.driver.InternalModemSupport declares no kernel dependencies; using com.apple.kernel.6.0.
    Feb 1 13:09:13 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: en1: 802.11d country code set to 'US'.
    Feb 1 13:09:13 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: en1: Supported channels 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 149 153 157 161 165
    Feb 1 13:12:08 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Up on en1
    Feb 1 13:15:38 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Down on en1. Reason 8 (Disassociated because station leaving).
    Feb 1 13:15:39 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Up on en1
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    Feb 1 13:18:08 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Up on en1
    Feb 1 13:31:48 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: hibernate image path: /var/vm/sleepimage
    Feb 1 13:31:48 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: sizeof(IOHibernateImageHeader) == 512
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    Feb 1 13:31:48 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: en1: Supported channels 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 149 153 157 161 165
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    Feb 1 13:31:50 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Down on en1. Reason 7 (Frame received from nonassociated STA).
    Feb 1 13:31:50 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: System SafeSleep
    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: hibernatepage_listsetall start
    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: hibernatepage_listsetall time: 114 ms
    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: pages 274489, wire 35250, act 50684, inact 887, spec 62, zf 137, throt 0, could discard act 24613 inact 28670 purgeable 6142 spec 128044
    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: hibernatepage_listsetall found pageCount 87020
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    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: IOHibernatePollerOpen(0)
    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: writing 86158 pages
    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: image1Size 73471488
    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: PMStats: Hibernate write took 4108 ms
    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: all time: 4108 ms, comp time: 592 ms, deco time: 0 ms,
    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: image 166148608, uncompressed 353234944 (86239), compressed 162715248 (46%), sum1 dc78ee00, sum2 4fe372a2
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    Feb 1 13:41:07 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: Wake reason = UHC3
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    Feb 1 13:41:08 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: en1: 802.11d country code set to 'US'.
    Feb 1 13:41:08 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: en1: Supported channels 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 149 153 157 161 165
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    Feb 1 13:50:04 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: IOHIDSystem::relativePointerEventGated: VBL too high (33307137), capping to 20000000
    Feb 1 13:55:23 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Down on en1. Reason 8 (Disassociated because station leaving).
    Feb 1 13:55:23 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Up on en1
    Feb 1 13:59:32 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Down on en1. Reason 8 (Disassociated because station leaving).
    Feb 1 13:59:32 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Up on en1
    Feb 1 15:24:13 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: systemShutdown true
    Feb 1 15:24:13: --- last message repeated 1 time ---
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    Feb 1 15:24:13 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: Kext unloading now disabled.
    Feb 1 15:24:13 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: Kext autounloading now disabled.
    Feb 1 15:24:13 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: Kernel requests now disabled.
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    Feb 1 15:24:32 localhost kernel[0]: Copyright (c) 1982, 1986, 1989, 1991, 1993
    Feb 1 15:24:32 localhost kernel[0]: The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.
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    Feb 1 15:24:44 localhost kernel[0]: DSMOS has arrived
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    Feb 1 15:24:44 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: IO80211Controller::dataLinkLayerAttachComplete(): adding AppleEFINVRAM notification
    Feb 1 15:24:45 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Down on en1. Reason 1 (Unspecified).
    Feb 1 15:24:45 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: en1: 802.11d country code set to 'US'.
    Feb 1 15:24:45 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: en1: Supported channels 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 149 153 157 161 165
    Feb 1 15:24:51 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Up on en1
    Feb 1 15:24:52 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: Warning - com.apple.driver.InternalModemSupport declares no kernel dependencies; using com.apple.kernel.6.0.
    Feb 1 15:25:35 Michael-Pines-MacBook-Pro kernel[0]: AirPort: Link Down on en1. Reason 8 (Disassociated because station leaving).

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    Be sure Safari does not have the Block Pop-Up Windows preference set.
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    I'm in love with my computer otherwise, and I'll admit that I spent a good twenty minutes sobbing out of frustration over this. Any help would be immensely appreciated.

    HI and Welcome to Apple Discussions...
    Try Changing the Airport Channel
    Open AirPort Utility, located in the Utilities folder in the Applications folder on a computer using Mac OS X.
    Select the device you’re setting up, and then click Manual Setup. Enter the base station password if necessary
    Click AirPort in the toolbar, and then click Wireless.
    Choose a new channel from the Channel pop-up menu.
    Carolyn

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