On Sunday 10 February 2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry for the OT, but unable to raise anyone at comcast right now.
I think I recall having read somewhere that one can do something to
discover what devices are on a network (Home lan). And what there
addresses are.
You are looking for
On Sun, 10 Feb 2008 12:55:49 +
Mick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sunday 10 February 2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If the authentication is configured at the PC/client end rather than
the modem, then you are probably not using the correct encapsulation
for the cable network and, or have
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry for the OT, but unable to raise anyone at comcast right now.
I think I recall having read somewhere that one can do something to
discover what devices are on a network (Home lan). And what there
addresses are.
I've recently switched from DSL to Cable connection
On Sun, 10 Feb 2008 21:52:14 -0600
Dale [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I also had to change the IP address on the router to a fixed address
to get it to work right. I think I had it set to 192.168.100.2.
After that, we had very little trouble with the connection. The
modem itself was
Dan Farrell wrote:
On Sun, 10 Feb 2008 21:52:14 -0600
Dale [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I also had to change the IP address on the router to a fixed address
to get it to work right. I think I had it set to 192.168.100.2.
After that, we had very little trouble with the connection. The
modem
Perhaps you need a cross over cable between the modem and the router?
-Hal
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry for the OT, but unable to raise anyone at comcast right now.
I think I recall having read somewhere that one can do something to
discover what devices are on a network (Home lan). And
On Sat, 09 Feb 2008 22:29:15 -0600
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sorry for the OT, but unable to raise anyone at comcast right now.
Really? I didn't think that was possible... although sometimes it's
good to call twice, get another opinion.
I think I recall having read somewhere that one can do
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