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Protocols and Routing IP, IPX and other protocol support

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Old 05-30-2009, 10:00 AM   #1 (permalink)
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Works for laptop, not desktop

I just moved in with my room mate and I brought my WGR614 v9 router with me that I had used back at home. I hooked everything up to her PC and internet but there was a problem:

My laptop gets internet because of the router, but my roomie's desktop does not. It's weird. In fact, the only way to get a connection on both systems is to bridge the connection.

It's not a hardware problem because I connected my laptop to the same port in the back with the same cable I had to used to connect the Desktop and... it worked fine!

So whats the problem? I've already tried a manual Static IP config. I can't even sign on the www.routerlogin.com on the desktop! Only the laptop.

Thanks
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Old 05-31-2009, 09:25 AM   #2 (permalink)
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Re: Works for laptop, not desktop

The following procedure should get you a connection with any broadband modem that is configured to use DHCP for the router connection, such as cable modems, and many DSL modems. If you require PPPoE configuration for the DSL modem, that will have to be configured to match the ISP requirements.

Note that the wireless encryption and channel selection will have to be done after the basic wired connection is established, the first step is to get wired connections working.

  • Reset the router to factory defaults by holding the reset button down for 15 seconds with power on.
  • Turn off everything, the modem, router, computer.
  • Connect the modem to the router's WAN/Internet port.
  • Connect the computer to one of the router's LAN/Network ports.
  • Turn on the modem, wait for a steady connect light.
  • Turn on the router, wait for two minutes.
  • Boot the computer.

When the computer is completely booted, let's see this.

Hold the Windows key and press R, then type CMD (COMMAND for W98/WME) to open a command prompt:

NOTE: For the items below in red surrounded with < >, see comments below for the actual information content, they are value substitutions from the previous command output!

In the command prompt window that opens, type type the following commands one at a time, followed by the Enter key:

IPCONFIG /ALL

PING <computer_IP_address>

PING <default_gateway_address>

PING <dns_servers>

PING 206.190.60.37

PING yahoo.com


Right click in the command window and choose Select All, then hit Enter to copy the contents to the clipboard.
Paste the results in a message here.

<computer_IP_address> - The IP Address of your computer, obtained from the IPCONFIG command above.

<default_gateway_address> - The IP address of the Default Gateway, obtained from the IPCONFIG command above.

<dns_servers> - The IP address of the first (or only) address for DNS Servers, obtained from the IPCONFIG command above.


If you are on a machine with no network connection, use a floppy, USB disk, or a CD-RW disk to transfer a text file with the information to allow pasting it here.
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