My advice would be to contact SBC sales and ask if you can get a static IP
address for your DSL line. There are two reasons for doing this. First, if
they offer static IPs, then you can be assured it will NOT be a 192.x
address (what would be the benefit of having a static 192.x address versus a
I use SMC routers because they are the same price as others and include
built in print servers.
Don't worry about your modem, the router has a Virtual Server setup that
pulls the port 80 traffic through to your internal network.
Go to the link below and check out page 56. It shows how simple it is
--- Tyler Nally <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Tuesday 18 October 2005 05:30 pm, Michael Avila
> wrote:
>
> > Sooo, I need to find out how to work with the
> worse case scenario - that I
> > receive a dynamic non-routable IP address. How can
> people access my site
> > with a domain name if th
On Tuesday 18 October 2005 05:30 pm, Michael Avila wrote:
> Sooo, I need to find out how to work with the worse case scenario - that I
> receive a dynamic non-routable IP address. How can people access my site
> with a domain name if the dynamic address keeps changing and it is a
> private network
May I suggest no-ip.com , I have used it for 5 years and it works great and
is simple to use. You keep your dynamic IP addressing and the no-ip.com
just tracks your current ip address and reroutes your web traffic to the new
ip as it changes. You can use it for free on a site called
mywebname.no-