On May 14, 2009, at 1:31 PM, Kris Tilford wrote:

>
> On May 14, 2009, at 1:19 PM, Mac G4 wrote:
>
>> Yeah - Ethernet to WAN on the router didn't work.
>
> This is because you can only have one router, and when you use
> Internet Sharing, the Mac is acting as the router.

Nope, you can have any number of routers, so long as they all behave  
themselves. You can only have one router per network segment.

[internet ---- Mac USB] Segment 1 routed to Segment 2 by Internet  
Sharing
[Mac Ethernet ---- WAN port on router] Segment 2 routed to Segment 3  
by the WIFi box.
[Router --- rest of the network] Segment 3.

The internet would be a very very small place if you could only have  
one router.

Ever do a 'traceroute'? Each step is a new router.

I'm suspecting that either his Internet Sharing isn't working  
correctly, or his WiFi Router is behaving poorly, needs to be reset,  
or he didn't actually connect the cable to the WAN port after all.

Your way would also work, because it turns the WiFi router into a  
hybrid wired, wireless switch.

-- 
Bruce Johnson
University of Arizona
College of Pharmacy
Information Technology Group

Institutions do not have opinions, merely customs



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