>
>
>    Is there anything obvious I've missed? If not, I will wait for next
> week's
> clinic and bring Belkin N900, laptop, cable, and myself there for help.
>
>
as I recall, you have a tendency to set up your network nodes with static
IP addresses. this scenario is one of the downsides of such a setup - your
static IP is not within the logical definition of the router's network.

try switching to DHCP, or setting statically an IP within the 192.168.2.x
range. once you're logged in to the router's management interface, you can
change the router's IP to be within 192.168.55.x, and then change your
machine's IP back to its previous. also, configure the router's built-in
DHCP server to hand out addresses that won't conflict with your statically
assigned ones.

then, you'll be able to reach the router's management interface from any
machine on the network.

oh, also: don't use the Belkin's WAN or Internet port unless you're using
it as  your primary router. Simply leave it empty if it's just being used
as an access point. plug the wire going to your upstream switch or router
into the Belkin's LAN port.

-wes
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