On Tue, 3 Feb 2004 13:41:09 -0800, "Pinto" <(E-Mail Removed)>
wrote:
> PC 1: IP address 192.168.0.1. Wired to router, has phone line and MSN 9 Dial-Up. Is connected to home network workgroup. Says it's "sharing" MSN 9 connection.
> PC 2: IP address 192.168.0.101. Wireless card with D-Link DWL-520 card. Is connected to home network workgroup.
> Router: IP address 192.168.0.42. Wireless D-Link DI-514 router. Wired only to PC 1. No other wired ports used. No other PCs connected.
>
>Hope this helps. I'm not at my home right now, so I can't provide the ipconfig info as of now.
>
>Btw, about the email thing...I didn't do that. Newsgroup did that automatically for some reason, even though I typed it in correctly and it shows up correctly on my first message.
Pinto,
Here is an website that explains how to connect two computers, and
share a broadband internet connection. Sharing a dialup connection is
only slightly similar.
http://www.cablesense.com/sharing/compare.php
With a dialup connection, you can't use Option 1 (Router) or 3 (Extra
IP Addresses) as shown. You have to use Option 2 (Sharing Software),
which is what ICS is. If you want to use ICS, but connect shared
computers thru a router anyway, you have to connect the ICS host and
all ICS clients as peers (all computers connected to LAN ports). You
have to disable the DHCP server on the router, configure the ICS host
with ip address 192.168.0.1, and configure the ICS clients with DHCP.
You can't use the router NAT function, so you have to connect the ICS
host to the LAN side of the router. And you can't use the router DHCP
function, because you have to use the ICS DHCP service to provide
configuration to the clients.
Essentially, you make the router into an expensive hub.
Cheers,
Chuck
Paranoia comes from experience - and is not necessarily a bad thing.