Yeah.... what router are you using? I ask because someone will be able to
tell you exactly where to make the change.
It sounds like you are set up with too narrow a range of IPs to be
distributed. Perhaps the start and end IPs are xxx.10 and xxx.14, for
example.
On my D-Link, the page looks like this:
http://home.comcast.net/~thuxton/ipsetting.jpg
You can see I only have allowed 11 DHCP distributions possible. Check your
setup for a similar setting and widen to allowable IP range to allow more
machines.
OTOH.... there may be a different problem involved. This is my best quick
guess.
Pepperoni
<<<<don't worry, I've changed my IP settings..... neener, neener>>>
"femaleengineer" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:1D03A031-2A96-4534-B0CA-(E-Mail Removed)...
> We have a wireless router in the house where there are two wireless
laptops,
> two wireless desktops and one desktop connected through LAN. The laptops
are
> suffering from the 'limited or no connectivity' problems mentioned in
other
> posts but the two wireless pcs are having no problems at all.
>
> One thing that keeps happening though is that when the laptop is plugged
> into the router to try to directly acquire an IP address, the router seems
to
> be assigning an address that was already in use by someone else. We have
> only succeeded to have four people on the network at one time; the fifth
is
> always being kicked off.
> I'm not so hot on this topic - does anybody have any suggestions as to
what
> might be causing this?
> Thanks
>
> --
> Vivir con miedo es como vivir a medias - except when the damn thing
doesn't
> work!