on 23/2/2000 11:17 AM, Michael D Green shot down the bitstream:
>> are you using NAT? I don't quite follow.
>
> What is NAT?
I didn't see anyone answer this, so here goes:
NAT is Network address translation. A router uses NAT to change your real
IP address outbound, and back again inbound. Why? The most common example
is sharing a single, real IP among several machines with bogus addresses for
Internet access.
>> 192.168.1.0/24 network???
>
> What does the /24 mean?
It means, "use a mask with 24 bits." Same as, "use a Class C 255.255.255.0
mask".
--
Ed Marczak, The New York Media Group, Inc.
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
--
To unsubscribe: mail [EMAIL PROTECTED] with "unsubscribe"
as the Subject.