Router Question

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iJohnE
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Joined: 21 Nov 2007
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Location: Red Creek, NY, USA
18 Jan, 2009 4:16 pm Router Question [sdp=95207]  

Okay, I have a 5 Port Ethernet Router, and I have it hooked up so that both my parents computer and my laptop can be connected at the same time.


One problem, when they are both plugged in, only one computer can actually access the internet. And if I want to make it so the other one can, I have to unplug (for example) my laptop, and then I have to reset my modem.

What I basically want to know is this, is there a way for both machines to be connected at the same time?

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PaulD
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18 Jan, 2009 4:55 pm [sdp=95208]  

At first blush, it sounds as if there are duplicate IP addresses.
Have you defined the network connections correctly for each computer as in paragraph 1 lines 4-6? If not, delete the definition and start over.
Also, the router must be set up to support DHCP; this is the normal default. A router can be defined otherwise, but each device on the network must then also be modified.

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iJohnE
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Joined: 21 Nov 2007
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Location: Red Creek, NY, USA
18 Jan, 2009 6:30 pm [sdp=95209]  

PaulD wrote:
At first blush, it sounds as if there are duplicate IP addresses.
Have you defined the network connections correctly for each computer as in paragraph 1 lines 4-6? If not, delete the definition and start over.


How do I do this?
PaulD wrote:

Also, the router must be set up to support DHCP; this is the normal default. A router can be defined otherwise, but each device on the network must then also be modified.


This is all a foreign language to me, as I have absolutely no experience with router talk.

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PaulD
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18 Jan, 2009 11:52 pm [sdp=95214]  

"How do I do this?"
- Who defined the network for each computer: you, or someone else?
- Start > Control Panel > Network Setup Wizard

There is much tutorial information in your Windows "Help and Support". Have you looked at that? If you don't have the fundamentals in mind then a set of step-by-step instructions is a waste of time.

"I have absolutely no experience with router talk."
- Fine; you don't want to change the router anyway. There is too much temptation to twitch things that could mess up the whole bailiwick.
- But DHCP is not just 'router talk' - it is basic to IP connectivity. Generally it is the default in your network definitions. Don't worry about it.

Please do some homework; then ask questions for clarification.

I will note that in the Setup Wizard that the wording can be misinterpreted. The area is 'network connected through a computer'. If you select this (you don't want to!) the network connections are created for ICS - Internet Connection Sharing. This means that the computer is doing the router function; it requires two network adapters on the computer. This may be what was (mis-)defined. Follow the instructions on the referenced post to get it right.

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iJohnE
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Joined: 21 Nov 2007
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Location: Red Creek, NY, USA
19 Jan, 2009 7:52 am [sdp=95217]  

Thank you Paul.

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iJohnE
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Joined: 21 Nov 2007
Posts: 1059
Location: Red Creek, NY, USA
19 Jan, 2009 8:04 am [sdp=95219]  

Paul, something to note:

There is not network setup wizard in Windows Vista.

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I'm a PC.
Dell Studio 1537, Intel Core 2 Duo T6400 2.0Ghz, Intel Mobile Graphics, 4GB DDR2 SDRAM, Windows Vista Home Premium 64-Bit.
User of: Mozilla Firefox 3.6 Firefox& Ubuntu Linux 9.10 (Karmic) Linux, Microsoft Windows Windows.
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