Hi,

    Other computers on your network can't see what you have in the hosts file. 
The
hosts file is only used by your computer locally. To solve this, you can do one 
of the
this things:

        a) Copy your hosts file in every computer you are going to use to 
telnet your
machine
        b) You can ask your network's DNS (Domain Name Server) administrator to 
make
this name (shao) to be an alias to your machine. This last option is the better 
one,
because every computer in the world will know that shao.xxx.xxx.xx is your 
computer
when they resolve your name.


    Hope this helps you ;-)


Shao Zhang wrote:

> Hi,
>     At work, my machine connects to a ethernet lan and it has a unique
> ip address. If the company's domain is
> xxx.xxx.xx, I want to set up a name so that I can telnet to my machine
> using shao.xxx.xxx.xx.
>
>     I tied to edit the file in /etc/hosts but it doesn't work. Could
> someone please help me?
>
> Thx
>
> --
> ____________________________________________________________________________
> Shao Zhang - Running Debian 2.1  ___ _               _____
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