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Router problem...
Posted: 2004-07-17 05:18pm
by GoldenFalcon
As far as I know, this SHOULDN'T be happening.
For some reason, besides my main computer, the router is ignoring both Ethernet and Wireless traffic from everything else. They connect just fine, but the router refuses to assign them an IP.
Why is this?
I'm using a Linksys Wireless-B router.
Posted: 2004-07-17 05:48pm
by GoldenFalcon
Ok...third time this has happened. The router's inexplicably begun reassigning IPs.
Why is it just shutting down and coming back up randomly?
Posted: 2004-07-17 05:54pm
by Shinova
Question 1: How long have you had the router?
Now, have you tried pressing the reset button for a while? (all routers should have one). Don't hold it long enough to clear your settings, but long enough to "reboot" the router, so to speak, and clear up connections and start fresh.
Posted: 2004-07-17 06:01pm
by Hamel
Check your power adapter's connection with the router. My router would shut off randomly because, due to a bad connection, it had to be positioned in a certain way to stay on.
Posted: 2004-07-17 06:08pm
by GoldenFalcon
Shinova: 3 months probably, it's relatively new. Yeah I've rebooted the router many times, each time it continually ignores the other connections besides this one.
Hamel: sorry, I should've worded it better. I didn't mean the router physically shutting down, but the IP assigning function turning off.
Posted: 2004-07-17 06:09pm
by namdoolb
can't you manualy assign ip's through the router control software?
Posted: 2004-07-17 06:12pm
by GoldenFalcon
namdoolb wrote:can't you manualy assign ip's through the router control software?
I tried disabling the DHCP server, but the router stonewalls me as to how I assign the IPs. I looked all around, but didn't find a page to do it statically.
Posted: 2004-07-17 06:25pm
by Shinova
Keep the DHCP server on, but in your computer's network connections settings, there should be a way to make it assign a specific IP to your computer.
Set it to something like 192.168.0.100 or something like that, depending on the IP number your DHCP gives your computer. Your IP might stick then.
Posted: 2004-07-17 07:13pm
by Crayz9000
Or you can set the router to have a DHCP pool of IP addresses that it will assign. Make sure that that's set to something workable.