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I currently get the internet through my college network with an ethernet network cable. Will I be able to plug this into my "ADSL Modem with Built-in 802.11g Wireless Router" and wirelessly surf the internet?? Or do I need a special router or something??

2006-10-29 04:23:41 · 8 answers · asked by leon 3 in Computers & Internet Computer Networking

Note: it says ADSL router on the box!!!!!!!! Is that an issue???

2006-10-29 04:34:18 · update #1

8 answers

The key to your question is "ADSL modem with built-in 802.11g Wireless Router"

Taken at face value I would say no because your device appears to have an ADSL port for the WAN interface. Ethernet and ADSL are twoo very different technologies. Most cable/dsl routers have an ethernet port for the wan interface because you usually have a dsl or cable modem in front of the router which actually converts the ethernet coming out of the WAN port on the router into something the provider can understand.

If your router has an integrated modem, then you just need to go get you a $60 wireless router from staples and set it up.

Just for the record, DSL and Cable modems are not modems, they are actually layer 2 bridges.

Hope this helps!

2006-10-29 04:32:21 · answer #1 · answered by I.T. Burnout 2 · 0 0

Cool attitude!!! the project is you could't try this on account which you will possibly might desire to have 2 separate IP addresses. One for the router and a 2d for the pc. The modem can't handle that, so the completed gadget might die. i be attentive to - information!!! information!!!! attempt this: Use a difficult cord connection, no longer prompt for this flow to router setup pages flow to the router status website From there you could watch the status of the router WAN component and see while you're dropping the lease on your IP handle. while you're, then you definately can yell on the ISP IF the WAN component is okay, use a similar hardwired pc, and placed across up a DOS window: use the ping command previously you lose your connection, and confirm you could ping a distant device. Wait till the relationship is lost and ping it back. in case you're able to ping it, the project is interior the device, no longer the router good luck

2016-11-26 02:05:49 · answer #2 · answered by clance 3 · 0 0

If you are getting internet through a cable network, sticking a wireless ethernet router in the chain shouldn't be a problem. If you do have any problems it may be with the routing side of it when a new IP address is added to the college system. That may end up with you having to talk to your college system administrator who may or may not let you use the equipment.

2006-10-29 04:27:14 · answer #3 · answered by urbanrt 3 · 0 1

Yes, You shouldn't have a problem. Your router will get an IP from collage network, instead of your PC. Your touter then will share this connection inside of your network with your PCs. It doesn't matter to collage if you do it or not, You are not adding axtra load on them, you are adding extra load on your network by sharing your connection which shouldn't be a problem for you.
Check your ADSL router. they get their LAN through Telephone line. You might have to buy a DSL router.

2006-10-29 04:36:32 · answer #4 · answered by TX-Man88 3 · 0 0

you will need a properly configured wireless router with an ethernet interface to connect to campus. Likely your campus uses DHCP to assign your puter an IP address so the Ethernet port on the router must be set to look for and accept it's DHCP - IP address from the school's DHCP server. Hope this helps

2006-10-29 04:29:12 · answer #5 · answered by john p 1 · 0 0

Burnout is correct. Your router's connection only has a telephone connection to the WWW. "Normal" routers have an ethernet plug.

Cheap wireless routers are out there.

2006-10-29 05:30:32 · answer #6 · answered by captainfish 2 · 0 0

It is possible. I can give you a link that deals with the internet connection Many of the problems can be solved by making software changes or small hardware corrections. Detailed instructions at http://tinyurl.com/yl62gz Try here if you can get what you wanted

2006-10-31 03:21:58 · answer #7 · answered by blsruthi 3 · 0 0

It depends if you have a WAN port or not on it. If you do, connect it there and setup your router to use DHCP.

Otherwise get a regular router.

2006-10-29 04:31:57 · answer #8 · answered by juliepelletier 7 · 0 0

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