The Journeyman
Posted
in
My network is on 192.168.1.x. His is 10.0.1.x (Apple TC). I pick up 10.0.1.35 and more or less can’t connect to the net.
I manually set my IP to 192.168.1.x and all gravy. Back to DHCP and look… I’m not Jim. My neighbor is Jim. https://t.co/Nbhqyi8MRR
My firewall settings, such as they are as provided by ATT’s router, look like everything is locked down. Any thoughts? 😀
Best I got is my @ATTCares router is set to be a DHCP relay agent and, somehow, my neighbor’s TC offered faster than my own router.
While his router is too set to be a DHCP relay agent? I suppose. Never needed to care this much about DHCP.
I’m back to square one. When I’m on my neighbor’s subnet, I have TWC external IP.
My Mac (wires or wireless), my Android, a Netgear (wired) router, wife’s Mac. I can switch between TWC & ATT by manually setting IP.
Just wireless, I could, in theory, say my neighbor has a AP with the same SSID/key as mine. But the wires router throws that out.
The only thing… We’re part of a research study that records power usage, sends it over electrical to an Ethernet. Could that be bridging?
For those following along at home, this seems to be it. The @pecanstreetinc decide apparently can serve as a bridge between me and nextdoor.
And @pecanstreetinc knows about it. They can come out to fix. Taking deep breaths before replying. Why is security not default?
Comments
11 responses
My network is on 192.168.1.x. His is 10.0.1.x (Apple TC). I pick up 10.0.1.35 and more or less can’t connect to the net.
I manually set my IP to 192.168.1.x and all gravy. Back to DHCP and look… I’m not Jim. My neighbor is Jim. https://t.co/Nbhqyi8MRR
My firewall settings, such as they are as provided by ATT’s router, look like everything is locked down. Any thoughts? 😀
Best I got is my @ATTCares router is set to be a DHCP relay agent and, somehow, my neighbor’s TC offered faster than my own router.
While his router is too set to be a DHCP relay agent? I suppose. Never needed to care this much about DHCP.
I’m back to square one. When I’m on my neighbor’s subnet, I have TWC external IP.
My Mac (wires or wireless), my Android, a Netgear (wired) router, wife’s Mac. I can switch between TWC & ATT by manually setting IP.
Just wireless, I could, in theory, say my neighbor has a AP with the same SSID/key as mine. But the wires router throws that out.
The only thing… We’re part of a research study that records power usage, sends it over electrical to an Ethernet. Could that be bridging?
For those following along at home, this seems to be it. The @pecanstreetinc decide apparently can serve as a bridge between me and nextdoor.
And @pecanstreetinc knows about it. They can come out to fix. Taking deep breaths before replying. Why is security not default?