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I want to know the ip address of the system which is connected in my LAN

2007-03-13 20:37:20 · 8 answers · asked by karthik J 1 in Computers & Internet Computer Networking

8 answers

First off can you find your own IP address.
Security software defends all PC's from this through a firewall.
Your LAN must be a home network. Is this correct. Need more info. Bandit.
P>S> The reason I ask is because my sister and I share a home network but we could not figure out how to simply share a printer. Finally figured it out and we can now share the printer as well as photos and videos. Hope this helped.

2007-03-13 20:46:17 · answer #1 · answered by ? 1 · 0 1

Your router stores all IP's that have been logged in there. If your not a pro with routers try using network magic that helps a lot. If you want to find out your LAN IP go to START-RUN-type CMD- then ipconfig
this will be your lan ip. If you want your ip that u use to go on the internet from your ISP go to www.ipchicken.com

2007-03-13 20:51:50 · answer #2 · answered by Saleen VS Corvette 3 · 0 0

First you need to know your own ip address. You'll need that to know the network address of your computer. Open a DOS prompt. In the dos window, type ipconfig. It will return your computer ip address. To find the ip addresses of every computer on your network, then you somply need to ping the broadcast address of your local network range. IE, if your local computer address is 10.122.2.126, enter the command (at the dos prompt):

ping 10.122.2.255 (.255 is the broadcast address).

If your ip address is 122.136.32.5 then:

ping 122.136.32.255

You will receive a reply from every computer located on that network with its ip address.

2007-03-16 05:58:07 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

several ways, log into each machine copy and paste this in the run box "cmd /k ipconfig" without the quotes

you can also ping the computer name of each machine from one computer. start run "cmd /k ping computer1" replacing computer1 with your actual computer names.

if you have a router you can log into your router and look for a client log.

there are various pieces of software available. personally I use WS_Ping Pro. it will scan your lan for all Ip address

2007-03-13 21:52:41 · answer #4 · answered by beni_gabor 3 · 0 0

very simple
first goto my network neighbour
and find out all the name of the computers
after that
goto command prompt
type this command
ping -a computername
this would resolve the comp name to Ip address
eg:
>ping -a HOME
Reply from 192.25.25.1: bytes=32 time<10ms TTL=128
Reply from 192.25.25.1: bytes=32 time<10ms TTL=128
where HOME is the name of the computer

2007-03-13 21:09:17 · answer #5 · answered by jack 2 · 0 1

it depends on your router. double click you're network connection then go to the support tab you will see your local address. if you're trying to find your ip for each computer, it's the same for all.

2007-03-13 20:46:45 · answer #6 · answered by ryan_macalinao5472 3 · 0 0

you will possibly be able to desire to password take care of your gateway so your workers won't have the ability to alter the configuration. in case your gateway is likewise your DHCP server, then the desktops immediately get the gateway address whilst they boot their desktops. Your gateway ought to help some thing noted as MAC filtering. With MAC filtering you could forestall particular desktops from going interior the direction of the router. you will possibly be able to desire to confirm the MAC address of the desktops you prefer to dam, then configure MAC address clear out to dam only those. MAC address filtering is particular to particular desktops, no longer people. in case you prefer to limit via consumer then you might desire a extra state-of-the-paintings set up favourite as a proxy.

2016-10-18 08:29:20 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Try this, Press Start, Run, type "CMD" without quotations, when the window pops up, type netstat, it should show all connections including the pc's in your network, if that doesnt work try typing ipconfig in cmd

2007-03-13 20:49:46 · answer #8 · answered by Dan. 3 · 0 1

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