hey steve, you can make the ip range anything you want
following the steps you gave me. for others who may need
to know, you simply unplug the connection of your
broadband access that falls under the ip range of
192.168.0.x (so the computer won't get mad at you when it
tries to set your home network adapter to 192.168.0.1),
then you manually change the ip address to your home
network ip range, re-plug the internet connection in and
everything works great. thanks alot for the advice steve.
In article <1957001c44cde$6e571cf0$a401280a@phx.gbl>, "jared"
<anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
>hey steve, you can make the ip range anything you want
>following the steps you gave me. for others who may need
>to know, you simply unplug the connection of your
>broadband access that falls under the ip range of
>192.168.0.x (so the computer won't get mad at you when it
>tries to set your home network adapter to 192.168.0.1),
>then you manually change the ip address to your home
>network ip range, re-plug the internet connection in and
>everything works great. thanks alot for the advice steve.
You're welcome, Jared. I'm glad that it worked for you. Thanks for
the report.
I've seen problems after changing the ICS subnet, resulting in
inability to browse the network. That's why I suggest making a
restore point beforehand.
--
Best Wishes,
Steve Winograd, MS-MVP (Windows Networking)
Please post any reply as a follow-up message in the news group
for everyone to see. I'm sorry, but I don't answer questions
addressed directly to me in E-mail or news groups.