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| Networking with Windows Vista Networking issues and questions with Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.networking_sharing) |
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hi all,
pardon me if this is a repost, but i couldn't possibly find a thread with the problem I have. Now, i have a windows vista home notebook from toshiba which i'm trying to connect to the internet with/by using a real ip. but as always it just gives me a message of local only. However, I can use the notebook via a fake or router alloted IP (192.168.1.2) but cannot obtain the ip my router has (202.xxx.xxx.x) which i program it to do (by disabling IP address distribution). It just doesn't work. I tried all the things i possibly could think of just to fail everytime. Example: suppose my router has the ip alloted to it i.e. 202.123.456.7, but if i program my router to forward the ip to my computer it just doens't work. My computer cannot access the internet. However, if i program the router to allot fake ip's i.e. 192.xxx.xxx.x then it works absolutely fine. Pls advise me on any existing solution/thread which I couldn't find. Thanks in advance, kratumay |
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why do you NEED the static on the computer? this is somewhat
confusing. I supposed you could put that computer in the DMZ, but typically people use a router to have a single connection and distribute private class (not fake) addresses to computers behind it for protection. On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 21:41:00 -0800, Kratumay wrote: hi all, pardon me if this is a repost, but i couldn't possibly find a thread with the problem I have. Now, i have a windows vista home notebook from toshiba which i'm trying to connect to the internet with/by using a real ip. but as always it just gives me a message of local only. However, I can use the notebook via a fake or router alloted IP (192.168.1.2) but cannot obtain the ip my router has (202.xxx.xxx.x) which i program it to do (by disabling IP address distribution). It just doesn't work. I tried all the things i possibly could think of just to fail everytime. Example: suppose my router has the ip alloted to it i.e. 202.123.456.7, but if i program my router to forward the ip to my computer it just doens't work. My computer cannot access the internet. However, if i program the router to allot fake ip's i.e. 192.xxx.xxx.x then it works absolutely fine. Pls advise me on any existing solution/thread which I couldn't find. Thanks in advance, kratumay -- Barb Bowman MS-MVP http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/e...ts/bowman.mspx http://blogs.digitalmediaphile.com/barb/ |
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Those aren't fake IPs, those are one of the ranges of addresses allocated
exclusively for use in private networks, which is what everything connected on the LAN side of your router is. Private IP ranges and internet IP ranges cannot communicate directly with each other,.. hence the need for routers and NAT addressing. The router bridges the two distinct zones, LAN and internet, allowing multiple PCs/devices to access the internet through a single external connection and IP. To use an internet IP on your PC you'd need to connect it directly to the internet using an internal modem of some sort or by using connection software on the PC to make dial-up connections through an external modem that is connected directly to the PC. Otherwise the external modem will typically be assigned the internet IP by your ISP, or your router will, depending on how the modem (cable or DSL) has been configured and the modem will connect to the PC using one of the preconfigured private address ranges. All devices on your network must have different addresses within the same range, so what you want to do, copying the router's external IP to a PC, cannot work anyway. Even if it could forward the internet IP to a PC on the LAN side, the router's own LAN side address range is 192.x.x.x so the PC would become unable to communicate through the router. "Kratumay" wrote in message ... hi all, pardon me if this is a repost, but i couldn't possibly find a thread with the problem I have. Now, i have a windows vista home notebook from toshiba which i'm trying to connect to the internet with/by using a real ip. but as always it just gives me a message of local only. However, I can use the notebook via a fake or router alloted IP (192.168.1.2) but cannot obtain the ip my router has (202.xxx.xxx.x) which i program it to do (by disabling IP address distribution). It just doesn't work. I tried all the things i possibly could think of just to fail everytime. Example: suppose my router has the ip alloted to it i.e. 202.123.456.7, but if i program my router to forward the ip to my computer it just doens't work. My computer cannot access the internet. However, if i program the router to allot fake ip's i.e. 192.xxx.xxx.x then it works absolutely fine. Pls advise me on any existing solution/thread which I couldn't find. Thanks in advance, kratumay |
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Hi
The computer gets it IP's type according to the Network that it is connected to (it is Not your personal choice). If you connect your computer to a local Network it gets a private IP, otherwise it would not connect. If the computer is connected directly to a pure broadband modem it gets an External Internet IP. In your case if you would bypass the Router and connect directly to the Modem you would get an External IP. If a computer uses WIFI (Wireless Connection) it is always a Local private IP, unless you have a special personal arrangement with a special ISP that provides you with Wireless Internet. Jack (MVP-Networking). "Kratumay" wrote in message ... hi all, pardon me if this is a repost, but i couldn't possibly find a thread with the problem I have. Now, i have a windows vista home notebook from toshiba which i'm trying to connect to the internet with/by using a real ip. but as always it just gives me a message of local only. However, I can use the notebook via a fake or router alloted IP (192.168.1.2) but cannot obtain the ip my router has (202.xxx.xxx.x) which i program it to do (by disabling IP address distribution). It just doesn't work. I tried all the things i possibly could think of just to fail everytime. Example: suppose my router has the ip alloted to it i.e. 202.123.456.7, but if i program my router to forward the ip to my computer it just doens't work. My computer cannot access the internet. However, if i program the router to allot fake ip's i.e. 192.xxx.xxx.x then it works absolutely fine. Pls advise me on any existing solution/thread which I couldn't find. Thanks in advance, kratumay |
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Thanks for the info guys, but i use p2p softz which are better off having a
external (static/dynamic) ip rather than a router alloted ip. However, the problem was noticed when my xp desktop was able to do the same i.e. get the ip forwarded from the modem, but my vista laptop cudn't. Now its highly impossible/unexpected that my isp(s) would allow such support with xp but not with vista. Which makes me think somehting is wrong with the config. XP accepts and uses the ip alloted (external) and works perfect, but vista doesn't connect to the internet with the same settings. It jus says local only. It wasn't just the one place where i tried connecting my notebook but was at 3 different places (of my relatives) which i tried to get thru with. Not surprised it doesn't connect to the internet. Network and sharing center shows this --- notebook--(connected)--router---(unable to connect/disconnected..whatever is meant by the (x) sign)--internet. There must exist a solution as its a software and something that i am not able to figure out.. I really appreciate your time and efforts involved in this problem, but it means a lot to get my notebook a external ip.. pls dont disappoint me.. (hopefully not).. cheers and thanks again.. kratumay |
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Hi
Before continue, I wonder how you get connected to internet: 1. By modem, VPN, dial up, Point to Point, or what? Or your router has a built in modem? - If you connected via modem, try to connect it directly to your laptop and configure as necessary. 2. Do you connect to your work network or ISP? Is it DHCP or static IP? -Correctly identify this will be a key role to successfully connected. If you connected to network, ask the administrator to obtain extra infos related your problem. If you connected using ISP, try contact them. 3. Do you have enabled network sharing on Vista's Network Center? - On some rare situations, some routers will connect only after you enabled network sharing. By default, Vista disabled this because it'll increase security risk. Also, try to disable and re-enable your network. 4. Do you install extra firewall than supplied Windows Firewall? Or antivirus/ antispam/similiar program? Temporarily disabled them and try to connect. p2p softs does usually works better if you connect using direct (or you as you said "real IP") connection, but by using router, it should be connected too. I found out that p2p didn't work at it best when using router because of overloaded traffic, eg. when your router also served many user beside you. Cheers. |
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