XP Network Problem
4 May 2007 10:59The office has a shiny new PC (Intel 2.4GHz Dual core cpu, 1GB Ram, Leadtek FX1500 256MB OpenGL certified video card.) I can get it to connect to the office LAN and see other PCs/Print/Share files through the DLink router.
I am buggered if I can get it to connect to the net. I've tried all the setup procedures I can think of but I'm not a confident hacker and XP's lack of configureability is beating me. Please throw suggestions at me. ("switch to Mac/Linux" will earn a tongue-poke.)
I am buggered if I can get it to connect to the net. I've tried all the setup procedures I can think of but I'm not a confident hacker and XP's lack of configureability is beating me. Please throw suggestions at me. ("switch to Mac/Linux" will earn a tongue-poke.)
no subject
Date: 4 May 2007 01:49 (UTC)I'll try what you suggest below, and force the bastard to accept an IP addy
no subject
Date: 4 May 2007 01:53 (UTC)That's a DHCP problem. Your machine is possibly getting an address outside the router's allowed DHCP range.
DLink routers usually have an option, under either Status or LAN configuration, to view the current DHCP table. It might be enlightening to check
A) what the valid range of DHCP addresses is
B) what computers the *router* thinks have addresses from it at the moment.
no subject
Date: 4 May 2007 02:11 (UTC)FIXED! It was MAC filtering on the router.
no subject
Date: 4 May 2007 02:15 (UTC)Why are you MAC filtering a wired network?
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Date: 4 May 2007 02:17 (UTC)no subject
Date: 4 May 2007 02:27 (UTC)#2: What the kind of router lets you set MAC filtering, but doesn't let you choose to set MAC filtering for wireless clients only?
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Date: 4 May 2007 02:37 (UTC)no subject
Date: 4 May 2007 02:41 (UTC)One more reason to stick with NetGear, then, hmm?
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Date: 4 May 2007 02:52 (UTC)no subject
Date: 4 May 2007 02:54 (UTC)My current router is an old salvaged Pentium class PC running the Linux based IPCop.