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TiT
Posts: 985
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Got a question
Received a Belkin Wireless G Router with my Dell computer. Now my boss wants to added to the existing network so we can have wireless network coverage in the boardroom. Can this be done? what network settings do i need to change on the router? As i dont want it to do any router function except plug it into our network and give out Wireless coverage. Thanks |
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| #0 01:54pm 25/10/06 |
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d[o_0]b
Posts: 1182
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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well the whole idea of a router is to bridge 2 networks, i think if you just ran a patch cable from a switch into a LAN (not WAN) port on your router it should just.... work? of course you will have to change the DHCP settings on your router to reflect your own subnets etc. which is very easy to do. PM me if you want more help.
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| #1 01:58pm 25/10/06 |
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blahnana
Posts: 492
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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That's not the whole idea of a router.
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| #2 02:00pm 25/10/06 |
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Tung
Posts: 4320
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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the whole idea of blahnana's router is to create a bridge between him and a goat
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| #3 02:20pm 25/10/06 |
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TiT
Posts: 987
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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well it actually monkey....
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| #4 02:22pm 25/10/06 |
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jmr
Posts: 4738
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Its easy
All you need to do is disable DHCP in the router, then plug the port you want to broadcast into one of the lan ports, not the wan port |
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| #5 02:45pm 25/10/06 |
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Raven
Posts: 1677
Location: Melbourne, Victoria
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well the whole idea of a router is to bridge 2 networks, Is this a deliberate bad choice of words? Bridge != router... I have a terrible time trying to explain the concept of a bridge to people :( |
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| #6 02:46pm 25/10/06 |
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d[o_0]b
Posts: 1183
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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yeah bad wording, without getting technical thats what it does tho
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| #7 03:10pm 25/10/06 |
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pARODY
Posts: 138
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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routers and bridges are similar... except commonly a bridge only knows of 2 endpoints of the network that its bridging. a router will accept connections from any network location and route it to where its needed or stop it from where its not meant to be. to use a wireless router as a simple access point.. as jmr said.. disable any dhcp service it has and plug a network cable into your LAN ports.. not the WAN port as that will confuse the router if it detects an internal network address connecting to an "external" interface, which most firewalls will think is a spoofed attack. make sure you secure the wireless with something decent like WPA2.. WEP takes a couple minutes to crack. |
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| #8 03:31pm 25/10/06 |
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TiT
Posts: 989
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Thanks
Got it to connect using wired but wireless yet... |
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| #9 04:23pm 25/10/06 |
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ara
Posts: 836
Location: Sydney, New South Wales
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routers and bridges are similar a bridge is more commonly known as a switch, they are not simular to routers. a router facilitates transfering packets across networks, for example from the internet to your LAN. when it transfers the packet it changes it's layer2 header. a bridge/switch is basically just a repeater. initially a switch will repeat anything that comes in 1 port out the rest of it's ports. As it learns which machines are on which ports it then only repeats the packets out the port the destination machine is in. it makes no change to the packet. |
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| #10 05:07pm 25/10/06 |
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Jim
Posts: 4982
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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I strongly doubt it
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| #11 05:19pm 25/10/06 |
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Obes
Posts: 4531
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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| #12 05:26pm 25/10/06 |
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whoop
Posts: 10553
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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I plugged the WAN port of my dlink router into the LAN port of my linksys router. linksys did the ethernet, dlink was ripping up the wireless scene.
worked just fine. \/\/ oh yea mr ccna? well I have a switching router briding my hubs last edited by whoop at 19:50:12 25/Oct/06 |
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| #13 07:50pm 25/10/06 |
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pARODY
Posts: 139
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Wow my ccna was so not worth it.... Here begins the lesson..... A HUB is a network device that takes packets in one port and repeats blindly out all the other ports. a switch is selective in its delivery of packets via layer2 networking using MAC addresses to route packets within the switch so that wire sniffers cannot work to their full extent (granted there are ways to do sniffing on a switch). A Bridge is as its normal physical entity describes.. it links two endpoints together.. a VPN is a form of Bridge, usually a bridge will be used to link two physical locations to be in the same network, ie a wireless bridge to a demountable shack so you don't need to deploy a wired solution. You are correct in a sense.. a bridge does the same job as a switch.. but its not inverse.. switches arn't neccessarily a bridge (cheap network places will say that a switch is bridging). Here endeth the lesson... |
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| #14 07:31pm 25/10/06 |
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Jim
Posts: 4984
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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I don't see a lesson in there, I demand a refund
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| #15 08:11pm 25/10/06 |
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Psycho!
Posts: 5727
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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hehe Obes wins!
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| #16 10:51pm 25/10/06 |
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gimpy
Posts: 1240
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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haha i cant do it, i bring myself to answer a work type question
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| #17 11:55pm 25/10/06 |
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ara
Posts: 837
Location: Sydney, New South Wales
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a VPN is a form of Bridge err. no a bridge works like a 2 port switch. it's purpose filtering the packets out that are not relevent based on the mac address tables for each of the ports. google is your friend. last edited by ara at 03:47:31 26/Oct/06 |
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| #18 03:47am 26/10/06 |
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jmr
Posts: 4739
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Shutup and answer the question f*****s, enough I KNOW MORE ABOUT ROOTERS THAN YOU
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| #19 07:50am 26/10/06 |
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TicMan
Posts: 1180
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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To settle the arguement, here is what Wikipedia says;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridge A bridge is a structure built to span a gorge, valley, road, railroad track, river, body of water, or any other physical obstacle. Designs may be built higher than otherwise needed in order to allow other traffic (particularly ship traffic) beneath. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ethernet_hub An Ethernet hub or concentrator is a device for connecting multiple twisted pair or fibre optic Ethernet devices together, making them act as a single segment. It works at the physical layer of the OSI model, repeating the signal received at one port out each of the other ports (but not the original one). The device is thus a form of multiport repeater. Ethernet hubs are also responsible for forwarding a jam signal to all ports if it detects a collision. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Switch A switch is a device for changing the course (or flow) of a circuit. The prototypical model is a mechanical device (for example a railroad switch) which can be disconnected from one course and connected to another. The term "switch" typically refers to electrical power or electronic telecommunication circuits. In applications where multiple switching options are required (e.g., a telephone service), mechanical switches have long been replaced by electronic variants which can be intelligently controlled and automated. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Router A router (IPA pronunciation: [raʊtɚ] or [rutə(ɚ)]) is a computer networking device that forwards data packets across a network toward their destinations, through a process known as routing. Routing occurs at Layer 3 (the network layer i.e. Internet Protocol (IP)) of the OSI seven-layer protocol stack. Hub's have jam, so I'm going to get some toast. |
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| #20 10:11am 26/10/06 |
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Raven
Posts: 1678
Location: Melbourne, Victoria
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To settle the arguement, here is what Wikipedia says; AHAHAHAHAHHAHAA. I was doing some reading for an article I'm writing at the moment, which as a result in my journeys I came across the Wikipedia pages for 'int' and 'long' (as in the data types). The inconsistencies and inaccuracies are incredible. As for bridges, your *typical* use of a bridge is to allow the conversion from one Layer 1 medium to another. That doesn't mean it HAS to change the layer 1 medium, as ara has pointed out... but that's what you'll usually see it used for. For instance, going from ST to Ethernet, 802.11g to Ethernet, 802.3ae to ST etc... in the case of a switch, you're typically going from 802.3a/802.3i/802.3u to 802.3a/802.3i/802.3u. |
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| #21 10:18am 26/10/06 |
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Opec
Posts: 4301
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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f***ing nerds
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| #22 10:37am 26/10/06 |
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