Quote:
Originally Posted by jersey
My next question is:
why do all 3 computers connected to my network have the same external ip address? wont this simply confuse things?
an…
MacNNNetworkingby Black BookWed, 13 Jul 2005 - 12:00
My next question is:
why do all 3 computers connected to my network have the same external ip address? wont this simply confuse things?
and can anyone point to a good, thorough…
Yes, the IP address that's visible to the world (the 67.85.x.x one) is the one you should use in your DNS record. If you have more than one computer, you'll want to assign the serv…
Quote:
Originally Posted by genevish
Does your home computer have a static IP address? If so, you just need to put that IP address in your DNS record for these URL's.
If you d…
Does your home computer have a static IP address? If so, you just need to put that IP address in your DNS record for these URL's.
If you don't have a static IP address, you need …
hello all,
sorry to resurrect this thread but i seem to be a bit confused.
i set up a sever at home, and using dns via my domain account features pointed it to my server.
how …
Thanks for all the help. I am going to pickup a couple of Apple Airport Extreme Cards and the Hub this afternoon and install them.
The folks at the Apple Store was trying to se…
Quote:
Originally Posted by lpetschauer
Were the machines plugged into surge protectors? If so, check out what (if any) warranty coverage you have from the protector manufacture…
Were the machines plugged into surge protectors? If so, check out what (if any) warranty coverage you have from the protector manufacturer.
Failing that, the cheapest thing to do…
Even if you do have AppleCare, it won't cover that kind of damage. You'd need insurance (such as www.safeware.com, which covers lightning, i think) to cover damage like that.
We have a 1 GHZ eMac with a 80 Gig HD and 768 Memory and a Superdrive. Our house was hit by lightning on Thursday and it took out the DSL modem and appears to have taken out the e…
Thanks for the link John, what about doing something like this:
natd -dynamic -interface en1
ipfw -f flush
ipfw add divert natd all from any to any via en1
ipfw add pass all from a…
I guess the reason its so vague is I'm just looking for more information on the way MAC handles ICS but I've found a bit of info on it now. Here is what I am trying to do.
I have …
Mav, a bit more detail might help here. What is your "device" specifically? All the data you've provided is extremely vague, so it's hard to provide more specific ideas.
MacNNNetworkingby ghporterWed, 29 Jun 2005 - 10:24