TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

Internet Works Fine From Lan Port. But Cant Manage Internet From The Router. How To Configure

How come I cant connect to Internet with my wireless LAN?

Is the downstairs computing gadget a computing device? if so it may desire to have a on the spot card in it. stick to the different instructions to locate your router (commonly perfect click icon in taskbar). the guy that stated SSID is real, yet you additionally can desire a 10-digit WEP key. Your cyber web provider supply you those codes on your router. yet another subject, if the downstairs computing gadget isn't a computing device, yet is a private laptop, does it have a on the spot card put in? maximum computers do no longer incorporate those enjoying cards and you'd be able to desire to purchase it one after the other (newegg has them much less costly). final ingredient to income. If the router sign is susceptible, you may desire to purchase a antenna extension (newegg) which will replace the small antenna there now with an prolonged cable with an antenna related (I even have one that works properly). one greater final ingredient - your router could actually be going undesirable. My Actiontech with Fios merely went undesirable like a month in the past. How did i recognize? - my computing device on the spot might disconnect and that i had to reboot the router daily to repair it.

Laptop internet connection through router?

this could be an issue with your router. if your router is set to not broadcast, then that could mean that the router works but is not set to show other people the network. this adds security because they have to know the network name and put it in manually. If you can see the symbol on the taskbar (usually at the bottom) that represents there is a wireless network in the area, then your router is fine. If there is not, that means either there is an issue with your router, or you need to manually go into the advance settings of your router and set it to broadcast. to access your router settings attempt to go to 192.168.2.1

if you can't figure it out you can always plug it into the LAN using the cord that plugs into your computer. This has 2 advantages. The internet is faster and more secure.

PC - Router problem, can't connect to Internet, help !?

Obviously no one can give you a direct answer, rather we can provide things for you to try.

1) Try something other than mail and Internet, try to ping google.com, try to ping directly to google.com (64.233.161.147) - if the latter works do a DHCP/DNS release.

2) Try connecting your problem PC directly to the modem to eliminate the router as a source of trouble.

3) If 2 works, you might wanna just reset your router and start from scratch, if it doesn't you might want to try running the network setup wizard in XP and then creating a fresh network connection.

4) A lot of network troubles are solved by using the manufacturer's NIC software rather than the one built into Windows - especially for wireless cards.

5) Hope that more people post suggestions for what helps them resolve conflicts.

How can I configure tp-link router to connect to internet connection cable which works through captive portal?

You will need to provide more info about your internet connection device set up.I have my TPLink router connected to an AT&T ROUTER/GATEWAY by configuring it to connect thru a pinhole thru the AT&T Router's firewall. It works great and avoids the AT&T prohibition against a router behind a router.If this doesn't help, give me details about you setup. — RandMart

Lan internet on desktop working but wifi not?

You only get one IP address from your ISP. In the setup you described, whichever device (desktop or router) you turn on first is getting that IP address. When you reset the modem, that IP address lease is cleared and that's why the wireless will start working again after you do this.

The long and short of it is that you can only have one device that uses an IP address connected to the modem.

You need to connect the wireless router to the modem, and connect the switch to one of the LAN ports on the router. This will solve the problem.

If that's not possible, then the only other solution is to contact your ISP and inquire about getting additional IP addresses.

I have a D-link router that works just fine but i am having problems with it.?

if you're connecting the DSl line to your computer through a USB adapter, then you first have to make sure that that computer is able to connect. If you are then saying that you are using the Ethernet port to share the connection to the other computers by using the router then you have to make sure that XP is set up to share it's internet connection. If I'm way off then perhaps you need to clarify exactly how your connecting the equipment togehter.

Wireless connection works, but can't access internet?

First, I would work on only trying to get one computer connected at at time; instead of driving yourself crazy trying to work through too many different problems at once.

Wireless problems are harder to figure out, so I would start with the wired connections.

I'm not sure what kind of connection you have (DSL or Broadband) and how it was hooked up before, so that could explain why one can connect and the other can not.

Anyway, I'm going to assume you have a DSL or Broadband connection, which you are now trying to share with your two computers. To do this you need to plug the DSL/Broadband modem into your router's WAN port, then you have to configure your router. For DSL (and maybe Broadband) your should select PPPoE and enter your Login ID and Password. You should also change the Admin ID and Password, so that nobody can get into the device from the internet except for you. Make sure you write down the new ID and password and keep it in a safe place.

Your desktop (the wired computer) should be plugged into one of the LAN ports.

Shut down your computer, the router, and your Internet modem and wait a few minutes. Then, turn on your moden followed by your router and finally your computer and test your internet connection.

If it doesn't work, you might have to turn off the modem and leave it off for a few minutes and turn it back on again, then try it again. Broadband might be a little different, but the sequence I gave you works for DSL.

Once you have the wired internet working, it's just a matter of getting the wireless to work. Do not make any changes to the wired to get the wireless to work, because that's taking a step backwards.

I have 8 computers at home and I have a 6Mb DSL line shared on wired/wireless LAN. Six of my computers are desktops on a LAN rack and hooked up to an KVM, so I use one keyboard, monitor and mouse for all six. Then, I have two notebooks. Plus, I have two inkjet printers on wireless print servers. Needless to say, my network is a real beast.

If you have any problem, you might have to call your ISP or NetGear.

How to connect Router-A to Router-B's WAN?

I am trying to connect two routers using Router A's LAN port to Router B's WAN port, although file-sharing works but internet is unsuccessful in Router B only. Here's the scenario...

Router A = Linksys WRT600N v1.1
Firmware = Official 1.01.35 build 5_20080115
Operating Mode = Gateway
Local IP = 192.168.1.2
Sub. Mask = 255.255.255.0
Gateway = (default (i.e. not assigned by me)
WAN IP : 81.97.227.7
Sub. Mask = 255.255.252.0
Default Gateway = 81.97.220.1
Internet Connection Type : Automatic Configuration DHCP

Router B = Buffalo WHR-HP-G54
Firmware = DD-WRT v24-sp1 (07/27/08) std
Operating Mode = Router
Local IP = 192.168.1.2
Sub. Mask = 255.255.255.0
Gateway = (default (i.e. not assigned by me)
WAN IP : 0.0.0.0
Internet Connection Type : Automatic Configuration DHCP

Now... I want to connect Router A (via LAN port) with Router B (via WAN PORT). I want both Routers to operate their own DHCP seperately coz I wanna keep Router A for home use and Router B for internet sharing in my neighborhood.

[P.S.] I already tried connecting both routers via LAN ports and it works fine, but Router B is using Router A's DHCP. I want to setup my network in such a way that Router A is connected to Router B and both work seperately with their own DHCP.

Can anyone please help me with this? I would greatly appreciate that!

Can't connect to internet with DSL modem but i can with my wireless modem?

First, make sure your DSL modem is connected to your phone line and it is making a connection to your DSL service. It should have an indicator light that it is online. If this does not work, this a problem with your DSL company. Some reasons for non-connection can include outages, billing, bandwidth usage, network abuse.

Next, on the computer side, make sure that your IP settings on your computer match the specified settings for your DSL service on your computer (i.e. DHCP, PPPoE (If required for your DSL company), Static IP settings ([if not using DHCP], which include IP address, gateway, DNS, and Subnet Mask).

If you are using a router with your DSL service (Wireless or wired), these settings get assigned to the WAN side of your router instead of the computers and the router gets connected to your DSL modem on the WAN side. On the LAN side of the router, you will need to enable DHCP and NAT on it. If this is a wireless router, you also need to set the SSID (network name), wireless channel, and WEP/WPA (security key - I recommend enabling security). Then on your computer, either connect an ethernet cable to one of your LAN ports on your router to the computer, or if it is wireless, go on a PC with wireless access, select your SSID and enter your security key. You should then be connected.

I have a modem and a router. I connect to the modem LAN port to router WAN port. How can I use the internet when I connect to the second router?

There are two ways of doing this:Method 1:Find an unused address on the private network of your existing router that is outside the range of addresses that router can use for its DHCP service. Set this address as the private address that the second router will use as its own address on its private network.Turn off the DHCP service in the second router.Connect a PC/LAN port in the second router to a PC/LAN port in the first router. Most routers can do this with a normal Ethernet cable, but occasionally I have seen routers that require this interconnection to use a cross-over cable.The WAN/Internet/DSL/Cable port on the second router is not used.What this gives you is a single large subnet spanning both routers. Spare PC/LAN ports on both routers are available for use and the WiFi networks of both are also available.Method 2:This works only with routers that have an Ethernet WAN/Internet port, and are not locked to a specific ISP. (ISP supplied routers may not be suitable to use as the second router.)Connect a PC/LAN port on the first router to the WAN port on the second router.Set the subnet address range of the second router to be different from that provided by the first router, and leave the second router’s DHCP service enabled.This will give you two separate networks. Microsoft networking will not work between devices on the two different networks, but will work normally between devices on the same network. It is possible for devices on the second network to access devices on the first router’s network using their IP address, but devices connected to the first router cannot open connections to devices on the second router unless port forwarding and probably static/reserved addressing is configured in the second router.The WiFi networks for the two routers must use different network names (SSIDs).If you want to access devices on the second router from the Internet, you will need to configure port forwarding in both routers, and set the first router to issue a fixed (reserved) address for the second router.I use method 2 at home. Non-trusted devices and visitors are allowed to connect to the first router, but only my private devices are using the second router.

TRENDING NEWS