J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Monday 20 December 2010 13:24:11 Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Monday 20 December 2010 12:04:27 J. Roeleveld wrote:
For the sake of the archives, I do need to correct you here.
With the current IP-numbers (IPv4) it's a 32-bit number, expressed as
four 8- bit numbers
On Monday 20 December 2010 13:24:11 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Monday 20 December 2010 12:04:27 J. Roeleveld wrote:
> > For the sake of the archives, I do need to correct you here.
> > With the current IP-numbers (IPv4) it's a 32-bit number, expressed as
> > four 8- bit numbers (A byte is 8 bit)
>
On Monday 20 December 2010 12:04:27 J. Roeleveld wrote:
> For the sake of the archives, I do need to correct you here.
> With the current IP-numbers (IPv4) it's a 32-bit number, expressed as
> four 8- bit numbers (A byte is 8 bit)
Of course. Thanks for the correction. I should just have stuck wit
On Monday 20 December 2010 11:44:11 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> (What follows has grown rather long. I hope it doesn't come over too
> much as a lecture.)
>
> It's fairly straightforward once you get the hang of it. The address of
> a device is a 64-bit number, expressed as four 16-bit numbers joined
Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Monday 20 December 2010 09:37:48 Dale wrote:
I set it up like this. The modem uses DHCP to get the IP from AT&T.
My local IP from the modem is 192.168.1.2. Then the router has the
IP 192.168.2.1 for my connection to the puter. The IP of my puter
is 192.168.2.5.
On Monday 20 December 2010 09:37:48 Dale wrote:
> I set it up like this. The modem uses DHCP to get the IP from AT&T.
> My local IP from the modem is 192.168.1.2. Then the router has the
> IP 192.168.2.1 for my connection to the puter. The IP of my puter
> is 192.168.2.5. The next puter will
Stroller wrote:
Sounds like you're getting it.
A computer (this includes routers) cannot have two interfaces on the same
subnet. They can have multiple network interfaces, as long as they're all on
different subnets. A router is a computer with multiple network interfaces,
acting to gateway d
On 19/12/2010, at 8:35pm, Dale wrote:
> ...
> O. Light bulb moment here, I think. The modem has a network, even tho
> it only has one device connected to it. The router has its own network but
> can have 4 devices connected to it. So, if the modem has 192.168.1.1 >255
> then the router
J. Roeleveld wrote:
On Sunday 19 December 2010 21:35:57 Dale wrote:
Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Sunday 19 December 2010 13:17:51 Dale wrote:
I found a how to. I read it. This is what I got out of it. It
sounds like I need to let the modem use DHCP with the phone company.
On Sunday 19 December 2010 21:35:57 Dale wrote:
> Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On Sunday 19 December 2010 13:17:51 Dale wrote:
> >> I found a how to. I read it. This is what I got out of it. It
> >> sounds like I need to let the modem use DHCP with the phone company.
> >
> > Correct.
> >
> >> The
Mark Knecht wrote:
I found a how to. I read it. This is what I got out of it. It sounds like I
need to let the modem use DHCP with the phone company.
[MWK] Yes
Then I need to set the ethernet that comes toward the router to say 192.168.1.2
[MWK] No. Set the WAN side of you
Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Sunday 19 December 2010 13:17:51 Dale wrote:
I found a how to. I read it. This is what I got out of it. It
sounds like I need to let the modem use DHCP with the phone company.
Correct.
Then I need to set the ethernet that comes toward the router to s
Stroller wrote:
On 19/12/2010, at 1:36pm, Dale wrote:
Stroller wrote:
On 17/12/2010, at 8:31pm, Dale wrote:
...
I bought this router the other day. I notice something that is a little weird.
When I first wake up and try to check my email, the internet is dead.
On 19/12/2010, at 1:36pm, Dale wrote:
> Stroller wrote:
>> On 17/12/2010, at 8:31pm, Dale wrote:
>>
>>> ...
>>> I bought this router the other day. I notice something that is a little
>>> weird. When I first wake up and try to check my email, the internet is
>>> dead.
>>>
>> I have an
>
> I found a how to. I read it. This is what I got out of it. It sounds like
> I need to let the modem use DHCP with the phone company.
[MWK] Yes
>Then I need to set the ethernet that comes toward the router to say 192.168.1.2
[MWK] No. Set the WAN side of your router to use DHCP. The modem
On Sunday 19 December 2010 13:17:51 Dale wrote:
> I found a how to. I read it. This is what I got out of it. It
> sounds like I need to let the modem use DHCP with the phone company.
Correct.
> Then I need to set the ethernet that comes toward the router to say
> 192.168.1.2 then set the rout
Stroller wrote:
On 17/12/2010, at 8:31pm, Dale wrote:
...
I bought this router the other day. I notice something that is a little weird.
When I first wake up and try to check my email, the internet is dead.
I have an alternative suggestion - I apologise if you find it unhelpful - b
Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Sunday 19 December 2010 11:53:33 Dale wrote:
This was fun.
:-)
I tried to set it up the way you explained but
apparently I ain't to good with this. Now the router don't work at
all and I had to hit the reset button on the modem. I'm glad I
could remem
William Kenworthy wrote:
Dale,
point 1 is that the problem you seem to have is that your two dhcp
systems are each giving out IP's from the same range, and as both are
starting at the same number, thats where the clash occurs. Simple fix
is to change the ranges so they dont overlap. Bottom lin
On 17/12/2010, at 8:31pm, Dale wrote:
> ...
> I bought this router the other day. I notice something that is a little
> weird. When I first wake up and try to check my email, the internet is dead.
I have an alternative suggestion - I apologise if you find it unhelpful - but
why don't you sent
On Sunday 19 December 2010 11:53:33 Dale wrote:
> This was fun.
:-)
> I tried to set it up the way you explained but
> apparently I ain't to good with this. Now the router don't work at
> all and I had to hit the reset button on the modem. I'm glad I
> could remember the password. :/
Ook!
>
On Sun, 2010-12-19 at 05:53 -0600, Dale wrote:
> Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On Sunday 19 December 2010 10:10:56 Dale wrote:
> >
> >
> >> It's pretty simple tho. Computer>> router>> DSL modem>> internet.
> >>
> > Seems to me that the only place you need DHCP is on the DSL side of the
Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Sunday 19 December 2010 10:10:56 Dale wrote:
It's pretty simple tho. Computer>> router>> DSL modem>> internet.
Seems to me that the only place you need DHCP is on the DSL side of the
modem, so that it can request an address from your ISP. If you pay them
On Sunday 19 December 2010 10:10:56 Dale wrote:
> It's pretty simple tho. Computer >> router >> DSL modem >> internet.
Seems to me that the only place you need DHCP is on the DSL side of the
modem, so that it can request an address from your ISP. If you pay them
for a static address, that's
William Kenworthy wrote:
Hi Dale, running two or more dhcp servers that are not in sync on a
network is asking for trouble. Traceroute wont help with dhcp as its
broadcast/unicast.
I am not sure if you have posted the full setup yet, but it appears you
have two devices running on the same class
On Sun, 2010-12-19 at 03:22 -0600, Dale wrote:
> Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > On Fri, 17 Dec 2010 21:27:09 -0600, Dale wrote:
> >
> >
> >> Both modem and router are set to use DHCP. I should know when I get
> >> some sleep next time. I'm not sure when that will be tho.
> >>
> > So what is p
Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Fri, 17 Dec 2010 21:27:09 -0600, Dale wrote:
Both modem and router are set to use DHCP. I should know when I get
some sleep next time. I'm not sure when that will be tho.
So what is providing the DHCP service?
Well, I guess they figure it out. lol I
On Fri, 17 Dec 2010 21:27:09 -0600, Dale wrote:
> Both modem and router are set to use DHCP. I should know when I get
> some sleep next time. I'm not sure when that will be tho.
So what is providing the DHCP service?
--
Neil Bothwick
The truth shall make you free, but first it shall piss y
Dale wrote:
Well so far it has been working. Maybe it got things worked out and
DHCP is working it out. Maybe it needed a little training time. lol
Both modem and router are set to use DHCP. I should know when I get
some sleep next time. I'm not sure when that will be tho.
Dale
:-)
Paul Hartman wrote:
On Fri, Dec 17, 2010 at 6:35 PM, Dale wrote:
Paul Hartman wrote:
Most DSL/Cable modems have a web interface built into them where you
can view status, diagnostics and most importantly logs. I think if you
can google your modem model and figure out how to access th
On Fri, Dec 17, 2010 at 6:35 PM, Dale wrote:
> Paul Hartman wrote:
>>
>> Most DSL/Cable modems have a web interface built into them where you
>> can view status, diagnostics and most importantly logs. I think if you
>> can google your modem model and figure out how to access this, it
>> might prov
Paul Hartman wrote:
Most DSL/Cable modems have a web interface built into them where you
can view status, diagnostics and most importantly logs. I think if you
can google your modem model and figure out how to access this, it
might provide some useful information. (Older modems might have a
telne
On Fri, Dec 17, 2010 at 2:31 PM, Dale wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I bought this router the other day. I notice something that is a little
> weird. When I first wake up and try to check my email, the internet is
> dead. The light on my DSL modem is red and Seamonkey can't check my email
> or load a webpage
Hi,
I bought this router the other day. I notice something that is a little
weird. When I first wake up and try to check my email, the internet is
dead. The light on my DSL modem is red and Seamonkey can't check my
email or load a webpage. If I unplug the router then plug it back up,
it w
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