Well, this will likely be my final installment on this DHCP issue and the PCMCIA "schemes" I wrote about earlier. I have gotten a certain arrangement to work, though I'm not sure how and why it works. I suppose this is a little better than not having it work and not knowing why it won't work, so I shouldn't complain too much. And, the workings of it all may dawn on me as time passes - if senility doesn't set in first, that is. It turns out that the "solution" (i.e., the procedure that allows me to use my old laptop on either my home, statically-addressed LAN, or on a larger DHCP network) is simple. I don't need any alternate "schemes" or anything like that. I just boot the thing like normal, let the init scripts (I think that's what they're called) assign my home network values to the PCMCIA NIC interface and all that. If I'm at home, all is well and good and off I go onto my network. If I'm away, I simply issue from the command line "dhcp," and all the necessary network settings are found and assigned to the NIC (or wherever they get stored), overriding the static values I assigned there for the home network. And away I go onto that network. All the while, I sit there stymied, wondering how I can cram any further information on networking and DHCP into my head. Clarifications on why this works, what may have been my misperceptions (as long as these don't involve statements like "that's what u get fer thinking u were smart enough to use Linux!") etc, are, as always, welcome.
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