Click Start > Run, type CMD, and then press <Enter>. In the resulting
CLI (Command Line Interface) window, type "ipconfig /all" (without the
quotes), and then press <Enter>. When you've seen all you need, type
"exit" and press <Enter>.
--
Bruce Chambers
Help us help you:
They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary
safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. -Benjamin Franklin
That only works if you are directly connected to the internet.
If you go through any kind of router, proxy server etc,
it will return the address of that device and not you.
Another way I found the other day that is handy is to
Start -> My Network Places -- under the "network tasks",
click the "view network connections" then click the
"local area connection". In the "Details panel", it will show
what your Nic is, the IP address, subnet mask and how
it got that IP address.
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