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On Sat, 17 Jun 2000, WolfRyder wrote:

> If the proxy is the only box that has access to the net, you can't get 
> around it. If each computer has a valid IP address, (not a class A, B, or 
> C), then you can get around the proxy. If that is NOT the case, it's a no-go.

Just to pick a nit, class A, B, and C address are all valid, however,
you are probably thinking of the reserved ranges within those classes.

Class A IP Addresses run from 0.0.0.0-127.255.255.255
Class B IP Addresses run from 128.0.0.0-191.255.255.255
and Class C IP Addresses run from 192.0.0.0-223.255.255.255

There are also Class D & E addresses, and they make up the rest of the
range (224-255).

The reserved ranges are:

10.x.x.x (Class A addresses)
172.16.x.x (Class B addresses)
192.168.x.x (Class C addresses)

But that doesn't mean my IP (24.5.73.229) isn't Class A, or that it
isn't valid.

Sorry, if you actually meant that, but I bet there is at least someone
else who didn't know about it on the list.

Jeff

My Geekcode has moved to my .plan file.
finger [EMAIL PROTECTED] for that and other Junk

My Public Key -- http://24.5.73.229/pubkey.txt 


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