the campus computer in my office won't connect the the Internet/NCSU network through my wireless router. Any way to fix this? Do I just need an Ethernet switch?If so, any good deals/inexpensive ones/have any I can use?
2/14/2009 3:27:45 PM
i'm confused by what you're asking.
2/14/2009 3:54:22 PM
The ncsu computer in my office (on campus) will not connect to the Internet/ncsu network through my wireless router - it will when hardwired into the ethernet port on the wall. I use the wireless router for my and my officemates' laptops so I need to keep the router, but I also need the ncsu computer connected to the internet.How can I get this computer to connect? I figured an ethernet switch would work, but I didn't know if there were other options. [Edited on February 14, 2009 at 4:06 PM. Reason : .]
2/14/2009 4:06:13 PM
:carlface:
2/14/2009 4:09:17 PM
Without knowing which router you have... I'll still suggest this because it works on most Linksys routers. Connect NCSU's connection to port 1 of your router. Then connect subsequent devices on down the line. The router then acts like a switch, and you can get an NCSU IP address, rather than one from the router.
2/15/2009 4:15:19 AM
I assume you're somewhere that doesn't have wireless access?The right answer is to call ComTech and tell them what you want to do. Be warned that it may cost you money.
2/15/2009 9:44:37 AM
NCSU does NOT like 3rd party supplied routers, esp wireless, or AP's to be placed on their network without approval. Esp as the NAT function means that folks with no LEGIT reason to be on the ncsu connection can then leach from it.
2/15/2009 10:20:37 AM
^^^that = no wireless then^^there is wireless but very unstable. I'm not paying the University for an Internet connection when it's supposed to be free.^I'm fairly certain that non-legit people aren't leaching. the signal doesn't reach very far (cinder brick walls ftw/ftl), so it's contained to within a few offices (thus no areas to sit and use a computer - unless you're sitting in the hallway), not broadcasting, network key, & mac filtering. Our laptops work fine off my router, it's just that the ncsu computer won't.DI-624 (i think that's the right model) [Edited on February 15, 2009 at 10:34 AM. Reason : .]
2/15/2009 10:34:44 AM
2/15/2009 11:19:45 AM
and then have them remove my router, sure.
2/15/2009 11:26:59 AM
nm
[[Edited on February 15, 2009 at 11:49 AM. Reason :
2/15/2009 11:48:40 AM
First try putting the NCSU computer in the router's DMZ.If that doesn't work, clone the NCSU computer's MAC address to the router.
2/15/2009 11:56:03 AM
2/15/2009 1:24:08 PM
2/15/2009 2:34:14 PM
because ncsu wireless is so secure
2/15/2009 2:48:16 PM
shhh.
2/15/2009 2:49:13 PM
^^ at least then it's comtech's responsibility, not yours.
2/15/2009 3:40:48 PM
thanks for the responses. I'm just going to go hardwired for everything to avoid complications.
2/15/2009 6:30:46 PM
if its a campus owned computer, call comtech, they have mac address locks on everything. thats probably also why your router wont work. Resnet is totally different. if you are basing off of being in the dorms, resnet != rest of campus including nomad, which what he is on isnt nomad either.
2/15/2009 9:21:29 PM
2/15/2009 9:48:16 PM
2/15/2009 11:08:45 PM
KISS Evan. Yes point, but Im trying to not get into a 2 hr lecture on how exactly the network works.
2/16/2009 9:56:21 AM
that wasn't a 2 hour lecture, it was a 2 line statement.
2/16/2009 10:59:42 AM
look he reads slow ok
2/16/2009 11:01:37 AM
it's a pretty pointed two-line statement, as well. it implies that the OP can spoof the MAC of a listed PC on his wireless router it should work without issues
2/17/2009 3:04:46 PM
http://www.ncsu.edu/it/rulesregs/wireless/implementation-rules.html
2/17/2009 7:20:53 PM
get a WRT54G and stick DD-WRT on thereyou can then disable DHCP and just set it up as an AP/bridge.
2/17/2009 10:44:58 PM
2/17/2009 11:11:36 PM
probably the best idea in this particular situation.
2/17/2009 11:18:52 PM