Thanks stuartl.

I have fix and it has worked fine
I know computer don’t respond to religion and I have make it work.
Once agin thanks

On Thu, 23 Jan 2020 at 01:11 Stuart Longland <[email protected]>
wrote:

> On 20/1/20 7:31 am, Josiah Akinloye wrote:
> > Hi everyone... please i have tried the method for the IP forwarding from
> my
> > sim module to the BB to be able to be us as Hotspot(WiFi) but going
> through
> > the fore given process,
>
> What steps did you follow?  You've quoted my email in it's entirety then
> top-posted yet more begging "please make it work".  Computers don't
> respond to religion.
>
> You're dealing with the Technology Genie here: he'll grant you unlimited
> wishes, *BUT* expects you get to understand him in return.  If you don't
> want to do that, pay someone who already does understand him.
>
> > i realize that only WhatsApp Instant Messaging App
> > is going... Other browser(Google chrome, Mozilla) are not going.
>
> What about the `wget` command I suggested?  What was its output?  Or are
> you just going to ignore our questions and hope we can magically solve
> it for you?
>
> I lost my crystal ball in the 2011 Brisbane floods.
>
> > i am
> > thinking maybe its because of the protocol used by WhatsApp thats why its
> > going through.
>
> … which is why I suggested doing some lower-level checks.
>
> Think of the OSI model, check…
> - physical layer (e.g. cable connections, radio settings)
> - data link layer (e.g. VLANs, LACP, SSIDs, crypto settings)
> - network layer (e.g. IP addresses, routes)
> - application layer (e.g. DNS)
> … IN THAT ORDER.
>
> You're starting from the presentation layer (web browser, WhatsApp) and
> working down.  You can't debug a network that way!
>
> > Please i need assistance on this. How can i make it work
> > swiftly and allow it to be compatible with any device and any APP.
>
> Then answer our questions.  We cannot read minds.
>
> > Any one who have done this before should be of help
> Not done it with the exact hardware combination you're talking of, but
> I've done it many times before on various systems including:
> - dial-up modems on a standard x86 machines running Linux
> - ADSL(v2) modems with PPPoE and standard x86 machines running Linux
> - 3G/LTE with various systems (including MIPS and ARM) on Linux
>
> Once you get the "router" (the thing the modem/module plugs into) onto
> the Internet, making it accessible to a network behind it is not rocket
> science, and actually hasn't changed much since Linux kernel 2.4 (5.x
> still uses `iptables`).
> --
> Stuart Longland (aka Redhatter, VK4MSL)
>
> I haven't lost my mind...
>   ...it's backed up on a tape somewhere.
>
> --
> For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
> ---
> You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
> "BeagleBoard" group.
> To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
> email to [email protected].
> To view this discussion on the web visit
> https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/beagleboard/20e4ad31-71b5-b8d9-f2dc-edd2087c3135%40longlandclan.id.au
> .
>
-- 







*Josiah Akinloye+2348062081641profile
<https://josiahakinloye.com>-https:josiahakinloye.com
<http://josiahakinloye.com>President at Main-Logix LimitedCeo of Savycon
TechnologyRobotic and AutomationEgalitarian TranshumanistFuturist"Mindset
powered by hard work equals unbeatable Achievement"--Josiah Akinloye*

-- 
For more options, visit http://beagleboard.org/discuss
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"BeagleBoard" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/beagleboard/CABXof%3DXdoGRinUX_%3DiQ1V7wBeis7y7B2bAvAXtrZ9roYbK-LJQ%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to