IIRC ...
Bridging is a process 2 link 2 networks so they can talk to one another. for
your case, bridging is not the answer.
As you have 2 interfaces for the outside network, you must specify which one
is which.
IE . for Wired interface, you have to specifiy its IP, Subnet, Gateway and
DNS to talk to.
and the same applies for the wireless ones.
BUT when you are at home, you have to specify that you want to use your
Wireless access.
Simple solution is to disable the NIC that is not used , ie turn off the
wired nic @ home or turn off the wireless NIC in the office.
=bob=
"TX2" <tx2inbound-invalid-@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> I am trying to set up a laptop to connect to a wired LAN, for when in
> use at an office, and a wireless LAN (intel based so it doesn't conform
> to standard practice) for when at home.
>
> The wired LAN does not need to access the internet.
>
> When I run the network set-up wizard, it insists on bridging??
> What is bridging?
>
> I have set the wired LAN up as 192.168.04 on subnet 255.255.255.0 on the
> laptop and this works fine for the wired LAN.
>
> However, when trying to connect to the internet thru the intel Wi-fi, I
> then get DNS errors in IExplorer, and cannot get email either.
>
> Clearly, the wi-fi connection cannot see the 'outside' world, despite
> the 2 computers that are connected being able to share files.
>
> How can I set the laptop up to use my LAN at the office, but my wi-fi at
> home, and more importantly, so I can use the laptop for the internet and
> email?
>
> Is the network wizard the way to go, what is bridging, is it important?
>
> OS is XP Pro.
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