> Thanks for the help! I was reading something about Bering while I was
typing
> and that's why I have Bering in the Subject. I really am using
Dachstein, so
> I'll try the things you mentioned. There are actually 2 computers on
the
> 192.168.2.0 network with a small hub to an INA card (something that
the
> phone company put in and has 192.168.2.1) then accross the t line to
another
> INA card (192.168.1.2) to a switch which the dachstein box
(192.168.1.1) is
> in also. Is there a way to do it without adding a nic for the
192.168.2.0
> network? If not I can add it. Hope this helps my bad description in my
first
> post.

Um...the description above is confusing me even more than your previous
post.  I could take a WAG at what you're trying to describe, but that
would probably only confuse things even more.  Try creating an ascii-art
diagram of your network, and a clear description of exactly what you're
trying to accomplish.  You don't have to use "network-eese", if you
don't know the terms, but provide as much detail as possible.

Remember, all I (or anyone else on the list who might want to help) know
about your network is what you put in your e-mail.  For instance, what
is the INA card you're referring to?  Is it something that plugs into
one of your computers, or is it stand-alone?  Is "t line" your telephone
line, implying the INA card is some sort of home-network (ie
non-ethernet) interface, or something else entirely?

Charles Steinkuehler
http://lrp.steinkuehler.net
http://c0wz.steinkuehler.net (lrp.c0wz.com mirror)



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