Dun Error 734 Vista
Contents |
(Русский)ישראל (עברית)المملكة العربية السعودية (العربية)ไทย (ไทย)대한민국 (한국어)中华人民共和国 (中文)台灣 (中文)日本 (日本語) HomeLibraryWikiLearnGalleryDownloadsSupportForumsBlogs Ask a question Quick access Forums home Browse forums users FAQ Search related threads Remove From My Forums Asked by: Error 734: The PPP Link Control Protocol Was Terminated Windows Vista IT Pro > Windows Vista Networking Question 1 Sign error 734 vpn in to vote I'm trying to connect to my universties vpn which uses pptp, vpn error 734 windows 7 but everything i try comes up with Error 734: The PPP Link Control Protocol Was Terminated. Any suggestions. Tuesday, October 31, froot vpn error 734 2006 4:57 PM Reply | Quote All replies 1 Sign in to vote I get the same thing on Windows Vista build 6000 (Final). We can't get any machines to dial in at all! They frootvpn error 734 all get Error 734: The PPP control protocol has terminated. Please someone give some advice. Monday, November 20, 2006 9:14 PM Reply | Quote 2 Sign in to vote i am copy-pasting the solution fron microsoft article : To resolve this issue: 1.Click Start, point to Settings, and then click Network and Dial-up Connections.NOTE: For Windows Server 2003, click Start, point to Control Panel, and then point to Network Connections.2.Right-click the
Error 734 Windows 8
appropriate dial-up networking connection, and then click Properties.3.Click the Networking tab, and then click Settings.4.Click to clear the Negotiate multi-link for single link connections check box (if it is selected).5.Click OK, and then click OK.6.Double-click the connection, and then click Dial. •If this procedure resolves the issue and you can establish a dial-up connection, you do not have to follow the remaining steps in this article.•If this does not resolve the issue and you cannot establish a dial-up connection, go to step 7 to continue to troubleshoot this issue.7.Right-click the connection, and then click Properties.8.Click the Security tab.9.Under Security options, click Allow unsecured password in the Validate my identity as follows box, and then click OK.10.Double-click the connection, and then click Dial to verify that you can establish a dial-up connection.If u want to read it directly, go to: Proposed as answer by ORKER Wednesday, June 13, 2012 11:12 AM Thursday, December 14, 2006 6:38 PM Reply | Quote 1 Sign in to vote I have same problem when I use my new laptop with new windons Vista to dialup, it said "Error 734: The PPP Link Control Protocol Was Terminated" even I changed the set on Allow unsecured password, unchecked Enable LCP extensions and Negotiate multi-link for single link con
setting is selected. FIX 1: error 734 windows 10 Confirm Username and Password or renter them before connecting. Check that Caps etc are not on. Most logins https://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/ebe6dc34-873f-41e6-8b71-8b0cf3930b35/error-734-the-ppp-link-control-protocol-was-terminated?forum=itprovistanetworking are case sensitive. Your browser does not support IFrames but you can see our links by clicking here
FIX 2: Click "Start", point to "Connect To", and then click your dial-up connection. Click http://error734.windowsreinstall.com/ "Properties", and then click the "Options" tab. Click to clear the "Include Windows logon domain" check box (if it is selected), and then click OK. FIX 3: Click "Start", point to "Connect To", and then click your dial-up connection. In the "Connect" dialog box, click "Properties". Click the "Security" tab. Under "Security options", click "Allow unsecured password" in the "Validate my identity as follows" box, and then click "OK". Site Related Hardware links - Internet links - Other links - Software Links - Web Design links By using this website you are agreeing to this Disclaimer & Legal statementlink control protocol was terminated.". Source of the problem Error 734 is usually produced due to an error in authentication. http://www.tech-faq.com/error-734.html Generally the username or password you are using to authenticate for the connection to initiate is incorrect. Resolving the problem First and foremost, validate that the username and password you are using for the connection are correct. Most passwords are case sensitive, so you may way to re-enter your password and ensure that your caps-lock key error 734 is not active. If your username and password are correct, you may be passing on your windows domain credentials where you do not want to. Click your "Start" button, select "Connect To", and then click the connection you use for dial-up services. In the dialog that opens, click the "Properties" button. Now click on the "Options" error 734 windows tab. If the checkbox before "Include Windows logon domain" is checked, click it to uncheck it. Then click "OK". Test your PPP connection again. In some cases, you are using a secured password for authentication where the remote server does not permit it. To fix this click the "Start" button and select "Connect To". Now select your dial-up connection. In the "Connect" box that appears, click "Properties", then click on the "Security" tab. In the "Security Options" region under the "Validate my identity as follows" section check the "Allow unsecured password" checkbox if it is unchecked. Now click "OK". Retest your PPP connection. You may have multi-link negotiation turned on, but are using a single-link connection. To remedy this click "Start" and select "Settings". Now click "Network and Dial-up Connections". Right click your dial-up connection item, and then click "Properties". Click on the "Networking" tab, and select "Settings". If a check appears next to the "Negotiate multi-link for single link connections", click it to uncheck it.