Dns Error Cannot Find Server Chrome
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forumForum Contact us Connect to other networks Fix DNS errorsIf you see a DNS (Domain Name System) error,
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Google’s public name servers: Make sure your Chromebook is server cannot be found because dns lookup failed connected to a Wi-Fi network. Click the status area, where your account picture appears. http://productforums.google.com/d/topic/chrome/c34ypxmNSnI Click your wireless network Click your wireless network name. Click the Network tab. Click the button to select Google name servers. Optional: If you have another server you'd prefer https://support.google.com/chromebook/answer/6100591?hl=en to use, you can choose Custom name servers and enter your DNS server address. ClickClose. Share this: Casey is a Chromebook expert and author of this help page. Help her improve this article by leaving feedback below. Was this article helpful?YesNoSubmit Connect to other networksConnect your Chromebook to Wi-FiMobile networks for ChromebooksSet up virtual private networks (VPNs)Manage Wi-Fi networksCan’t connect Chrome device to the networkFix DNS errors ©2016 Google Privacy Policy Terms of Service Contact Us Bahasa MelayucatalàdanskDeutscheestiEnglish (United Kingdom)españolespañol (Latinoamérica)FilipinofrançaishrvatskiIndonesiaitalianolatviešulietuviųmagyarNederlandsnorskpolskiportuguêsportuguês (Brasil)românăslovenčinaslovenščinasuomisvenskaTiếng ViệtTürkçečeštinaΕλληνικάбългарскирусскийсрпскиукраїнськаעבריתالعربيةفارسیहिन्दीไทย中文(简体)中文(繁體)日本語한국어 English
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Oops! This link appears to be broken in Google Chrome You are trying to open a web page in Chrome and all it gives you is this error message - “DNS Error – cannot find server.” You hit F5 to refresh a page but the error persists. You then open an alternate browser, like Firefox or IE, and the website loads up without any problem. So its a Chrome specific issue and has nothing to do with DNS Servers or your Internet connection. The support page on the Chrome website suggests that you clear your browser cache, delete the cookies and scan your computer for malicious software to fix the issue. Well, that may not fix your problem because the issue is not “malware” but a built-in Chrome setting that's possibly preventing certain websites from opening up in Chrome. When you visit a webpage (like a search results page), Google Chrome will pre-fetch the IP addresses of all websites that are listed on that page. Since the browser has the IP addresses of all the links in advance, DNS pre-fetching ensures that any links that may you click on that webpage will load faster. However, when pre-fetching fails, something that's not very uncommon, you may get the “link broken” error. You are more likely to see such an error when you are trying to open a website that you have never visited before. The fix is simple - go to Tools > Options (or Preferences on a Mac) > Under the Hood and uncheck the setting that says “Use DNS pre-fetching to improve page load performance.” This might increase the loading time of certain pages by a few microseconds but you won't at least see that misleading error message. Related: When you cannot open a specific website Tweet Comments are closed but if you want to respond, please send me an email or tweet.