> Ah.  The three IPs are in a block.  I sit corrected.
I dont believe so... There is no such thing as a block of 3 IP's AFAIK,
you can make a subnet of 8 ip's, inwhich you use 3 of them for your net
(network, gateway, and broadcast, addresses, you will need the help of
arin (www.arin.net) to setup and netblock, and you would have a netmask of
255.255.255.248 for a block of 8 ip's.

        So... probably he has 3 ip's in a block of 256, with a netmask of
255.255.255.0 (which means he has 3 ip's in someone elses network, which
is really quite different!)

You can still do what you want to do, however i believe its going to be
more difficult than you think to route non-IEEE protocols, it may just be
a matter of a little customizing, or it may be a lot of
re-writing/writing/testing new code.

Jamie

 > > -- 
>                                         K<bob>
> [EMAIL PROTECTED], http://www.jogger-egg.com/
> 

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