Thanks Frank,
All the connections are plugged in correctly.
The DSL is connect to the WAN on the router and the Airport is connected to one of the 4 LAN ports.
The problem was / is that I couldn't find the bridge mode on the Airport config tool. I found that the Airport Java Configurator gave access to bridge mode. And NAT and DHCP is turned off, with the the router handling this.
Now wireless is able to see computers on the LAN but not the other way. This is really odd...
On Jul 28, 2004, at 7:46 PM, Frank Keeney wrote:
Kelley,
Many of the Router / Access Points are designed for connecting to the
Internet as a "firewall". On these types of devices there is normally an
Ethernet port labeled "WAN" or "Internet", this port is designed for a
direct connection to a DSL or Cable Modem. Do _not_ use this port if you are
attempting to allow full access between the wired and wireless networks. Use
one of the other ports for the Ethernet or wired side of the network.
As described above, you are not using any of the router functions and should
allow access between wired and wireless.
Frank Keeney http://www.wlanparts.com
-----Original Message----- On Behalf Of Kelley Law
I was asked to look at a friends network, and seem to have run into a small problem.
The wired computer can see the wireless but not visa versa. They are using a using a Network Everywhere router NT041 with a Airport Extreme connected to it.
Any ideas on how to get the wireless computers to see the wired? I have turned off NAT and DHCP on the Airport but can't seem to find the bridging function.
Also does any know about the Network Everywhere router, I see it is a Linksys. I am wondering if the firmware can me changed like the WRT54G?
