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Chap here wants to be able to connect his work laptop to the net via his
NTL connection at home. He already has several PCs at home, and has to plug/unplug each one to the NTL brick using an ethernet connection. From what he's said, the PC is assigned a public IP, so I'm guessing it's a modem and no NAT is happening? My thoughts are get a suitable router and he can use it's NAT/firewalling capabilities to have several PCs connected at once, including his home machine? Any thoughts on a cheap yet suitable router? I'm not at all familiar with NTLs way of doing broadband. TIA, Paul -- paul <at> spamcop.net Paul Hutchings |
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Harvey Van Sickle <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
news:Xns954E8BD704EF6whhvans@194.168.222.125: > The router (Belkin version 1223UK) will take up to 4 hard-wired PCs, > and claims to handle up to 64 wireless connections (either notebooks or > desktops, via wireless cards). Thanks, my main query was if a router with modem is needed, or if these cheap "cable/dsl" routers would do the job, i.e Linksys BEFSR41 at around thirty quid? regards, Paul -- paul <at> spamcop.net |
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Paul Hutchings <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
news:Xns954E8FCF6519Fpaulhutchingsspamcop@130.133. 1.4: > Thanks, my main query was if a router with modem is needed, or > if these cheap "cable/dsl" routers would do the job, i.e Linksys > BEFSR41 at around thirty quid? > Yep. The cable modem supplied by NTL has both USB and Ethernet connections. Cable/DSL router, BEFSR41 or similar, will work fine. ADSL modem router won't work. |
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#4
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On 23 Aug 2004, Paul Hutchings wrote
> Chap here wants to be able to connect his work laptop to the net > via his NTL connection at home. > > He already has several PCs at home, and has to plug/unplug each > one to the NTL brick using an ethernet connection. > > From what he's said, the PC is assigned a public IP, so I'm > guessing it's a modem and no NAT is happening? > > My thoughts are get a suitable router and he can use it's > NAT/firewalling capabilities to have several PCs connected at > once, including his home machine? > > Any thoughts on a cheap yet suitable router? I'm not at all > familiar with NTLs way of doing broadband. I use a Belkin 802.11g wireless router, with a network card for the notebook -- the router cost me about £60 at PCWorld, and the card another £25 or £30. (One can undoubtedly find equivalents at less cost on the Internet.) The router (Belkin version 1223UK) will take up to 4 hard-wired PCs, and claims to handle up to 64 wireless connections (either notebooks or desktops, via wireless cards). HTH -- Cheers, Harvey |
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#5
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On 23 Aug 2004, Paul Hutchings wrote
> Harvey Van Sickle <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in > news:Xns954E8BD704EF6whhvans@194.168.222.125: > >> The router (Belkin version 1223UK) will take up to 4 hard-wired >> PCs, and claims to handle up to 64 wireless connections (either >> notebooks or desktops, via wireless cards). > > Thanks, my main query was if a router with modem is needed, or if > these cheap "cable/dsl" routers would do the job, i.e Linksys > BEFSR41 at around thirty quid? My "not so cheap" Belkin doesn't have a modem: it's just an adsl/cable router. (I'm on a cable modem rather than one of ntl's set-top box connections, but I don't think that makes any difference -- the modem side of things is taken care of by the ntl kit, and all you need is a router.) The fount of all knowledge on cable modems, setting up, networking, etc. is Robin Walker -- you'll undoubtedly find some good info on his pages: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/robin.d...ips/index.html -- Cheers, Harvey |
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#6
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On 23 Aug 2004, Harvey Van Sickle wrote
-snip- > The fount of all knowledge on cable modems, setting up, > networking, etc. is Robin Walker -- you'll undoubtedly find some > good info on his pages: > > http://homepage.ntlworld.com/robin.d...ips/index.html Found the relevant page: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/robin.d...s/homelan.html HTH -- Cheers, Harvey |
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#7
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Harvey Van Sickle <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in
news:Xns954E92DBDD7BAwhhvans@194.168.222.121: > Found the relevant page: > http://homepage.ntlworld.com/robin.d...s/homelan.html Thanks, implication seems to be that the cheapy linksys routers do the job. regards, Paul -- paul <at> spamcop.net |
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#8
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"Paul Hutchings" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:Xns954E8FCF6519Fpaulhutchingsspamcop@130.133. 1.4... > Harvey Van Sickle <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in > news:Xns954E8BD704EF6whhvans@194.168.222.125: > Thanks, my main query was if a router with modem is needed, or if these > cheap "cable/dsl" routers would do the job, i.e Linksys BEFSR41 at around > thirty quid? No, you don't need a modem with any router you use on an NTL connection, the STB (set top box) or SCM (stand-a-lone Cable Modem) acts as the modem; you just need a plain router. I used a Linksys BEFW11S4 (includes wireless) with my NTL connection and still use it but have added a Netgear DM602 to use an ADSL connection. Regards - Keef -- Dartford Kent UK Email (E-Mail Removed) (To reply, remove the WRAPPER) Web: http://homepage.ntlworld.com/k.hallock/fsale.html |
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#9
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"Keef" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in news:9pdpv1-(E-Mail Removed):
> No, you don't need a modem with any router you use on an NTL > connection, the STB (set top box) or SCM (stand-a-lone Cable Modem) > acts as the modem; you just need a plain router. I used a Linksys > BEFW11S4 (includes wireless) with my NTL connection and still use it > but have added a Netgear DM602 to use an ADSL connection. Thanks, probably a silly question but as I'm not an NTL customer, what's the connection between the router and whatever it is they terminate the cable feed with? RJ11 or RJ45? IIRC there was some fuss about NTL customers needing to "unlock" their connection - presumably nowdays it's just a case of plug in router, set external NIC to DHCP and away you go? cheers, Paul -- paul <at> spamcop.net |
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#10
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In message <Xns954EA60B5A6A7paulhutchingsspamcop@130.133.1.4> , Paul
Hutchings <(E-Mail Removed)> writes >"Keef" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in news:9pdpv1-(E-Mail Removed): > >> No, you don't need a modem with any router you use on an NTL >> connection, the STB (set top box) or SCM (stand-a-lone Cable Modem) >> acts as the modem; you just need a plain router. I used a Linksys >> BEFW11S4 (includes wireless) with my NTL connection and still use it >> but have added a Netgear DM602 to use an ADSL connection. > >Thanks, probably a silly question but as I'm not an NTL customer, what's >the connection between the router and whatever it is they terminate the >cable feed with? RJ11 or RJ45? ntl: isolator to cable modem or STB is low-loss coax with F-type connectors, which the ntl: engineer will install. ntl: cable modem or STB to router is 10Base-T Ethernet (so RJ45). As an alternative, most ntl: kit has a USB B port - you can use this with a USB cable if you want to connect the cable modem directly to a computer that lacks an Ethernet port (either built in or on a NIC), though this isn't recommended. >IIRC there was some fuss about NTL customers needing to "unlock" their >connection - presumably nowdays it's just a case of plug in router, set >external NIC to DHCP and away you go? That was to do with ntl:'s DHCP servers not allocating an IP address to a different MAC address behind the cable modem - usually sorted by power-cycling the cable modem. These days the DHCP servers tend not to be quite so troublesome - changing your equipment tends to work without power-cycling the cable modem. David -- David Wood (E-Mail Removed) |
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| modem or router, ntl, suitable |
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