havkat Skrevet 28. desember 2009 Del Skrevet 28. desember 2009 Hei Jeg har kjøpt xbox 360 elite, når jeg kom hjem så fant jeg ut at jeg hadde bare trådløst nettverk på området der xboxen er plassert. Nettverks utstyret står på rommet ved siden av. Og det finnes ikke lang nokk ledning inn til det rommet. Er det noen som har noen tips? Og nettverks adapter til xbox blir litt dyrt i første omgang. Mvh Katrine Lenke til kommentar
Zeph Skrevet 28. desember 2009 Del Skrevet 28. desember 2009 Om nettverksadapter blir for dyrt blir vel ein trådlaus mottakar for dyrt og. Du kan få tilgang på den ved å kople til ein PC som mottar trådlaust og deler internettforbindelsen. Lenke til kommentar
havkat Skrevet 28. desember 2009 Forfatter Del Skrevet 28. desember 2009 Om nettverksadapter blir for dyrt blir vel ein trådlaus mottakar for dyrt og. Du kan få tilgang på den ved å kople til ein PC som mottar trådlaust og deler internettforbindelsen. Trådløs mottaker? Jeg har en bærbar pc, med trådløs da. Hvordan gjør jeg det da? Lenke til kommentar
TiNuSsS Skrevet 28. desember 2009 Del Skrevet 28. desember 2009 Hei Dette er hvordan man setter opp en bridge via en laptop. Prøver dette nå på en Xbox 360. I dont know about the laptop cable to the xbox. but here is from my guide on bridging.1E. Network Routing and Bridging You use a networking technology called routing to make two or more networks or, to be more technically correct, two network segments, interoperate. A machine that bridged the two networks-that is, the machine with two network adapters-acted like a hardware router, intercepting network traffic and routing it to the correct machine on either network as needed. This routing happens every day on the internet and in large corporate networks all around the world. As a home networking solution, however, its a bit complex and requires a server operating system such as Windows Server or even Linux. 1F. Network Bridging To make this routing possible on home networks, however, Microsoft added a feature called network bridging to Windows XP. You have two networks, perhaps a wired Ethernet network that's connected in some way to broadband internet connection, and a wireless network. But the wireless network connects to the wired network through an XP-based PC that includes both wired and wireless adapters, instead of the simpler wireless access point approach. When you create a network bridge-that is, you bridge, or connect, two different networks-XP creates a single subnet for the whole virtual network, configures the whole mess behind the scenes, and handles ugly details such as IP Addressing, dynamic IP address allocation, and the like. It's an enterprise network in a box, if you will. The results is a single IP address range for all the bridged network connections. (Remember that two or more adapters can be involved in a bridge; you can add and remove adapters from the bridge network whenever you want.) It all sounds really nice, doesnt it? Well, it would be if it worked. The problem is that XP's default method for enabling network bridging is quite broken. Thats right; it often doesnt work at all. SO LETS DO IT THE WAY IT WORKS: Creating a network bridge 1. Open network connections. ( The quickest way is to right click My Network Places and choose properties) 2. Simultaneously select the two network connections you'd like to bridge, right click, and choose Bridge Connections. A network bridge dialog box appears, and the connections are bridged. When the process is completed, Network Connections resembles with a new network bridge section that includes three icons: one for the two bridged network connections and one for the logical bridge by itself. You can configure bridging from this icon. 1G. Adding/Removing Connections From Networked Bridges Adding a network connection to a preestablished network bridge is simplicity itself: Right click the appropriate connectoid in Network Connections and select Add to bridge. XP will churn and bubble a bit, and the deed will be done. The steps to remove a particular network connection from the bridge are equally simple: right click the connection you want removed and select remove from bridge. No Fuss, no muss! 1H. Enabling and Disabling Bridges Because a network bridge functions like a single network connection, you can choose to enable, and disable it just as you would with any network connection. When you do so, all the connections in the bridge sre enabled or disabled along with the bridge. To disable a network bridge, right click the bridge icon and choose disable. To enable, do the same but just hit enable. 1I. Removing a Network Bridge If you create a network bridge and it's not all that you hoped and dreamed for, its really easy to remove and return to your previous setup. To do this, you must first remove each of the network connections that are part of the bridge. Then right click the network bridge icon and choose delete. Select yes when XP asks you whether you're sure. Lenke til kommentar
havkat Skrevet 28. desember 2009 Forfatter Del Skrevet 28. desember 2009 Hei Dette er hvordan man setter opp en bridge via en laptop. Prøver dette nå på en Xbox 360. I dont know about the laptop cable to the xbox. but here is from my guide on bridging.1E. Network Routing and Bridging You use a networking technology called routing to make two or more networks or, to be more technically correct, two network segments, interoperate. A machine that bridged the two networks-that is, the machine with two network adapters-acted like a hardware router, intercepting network traffic and routing it to the correct machine on either network as needed. This routing happens every day on the internet and in large corporate networks all around the world. As a home networking solution, however, its a bit complex and requires a server operating system such as Windows Server or even Linux. 1F. Network Bridging To make this routing possible on home networks, however, Microsoft added a feature called network bridging to Windows XP. You have two networks, perhaps a wired Ethernet network that's connected in some way to broadband internet connection, and a wireless network. But the wireless network connects to the wired network through an XP-based PC that includes both wired and wireless adapters, instead of the simpler wireless access point approach. When you create a network bridge-that is, you bridge, or connect, two different networks-XP creates a single subnet for the whole virtual network, configures the whole mess behind the scenes, and handles ugly details such as IP Addressing, dynamic IP address allocation, and the like. It's an enterprise network in a box, if you will. The results is a single IP address range for all the bridged network connections. (Remember that two or more adapters can be involved in a bridge; you can add and remove adapters from the bridge network whenever you want.) It all sounds really nice, doesnt it? Well, it would be if it worked. The problem is that XP's default method for enabling network bridging is quite broken. Thats right; it often doesnt work at all. SO LETS DO IT THE WAY IT WORKS: Creating a network bridge 1. Open network connections. ( The quickest way is to right click My Network Places and choose properties) 2. Simultaneously select the two network connections you'd like to bridge, right click, and choose Bridge Connections. A network bridge dialog box appears, and the connections are bridged. When the process is completed, Network Connections resembles with a new network bridge section that includes three icons: one for the two bridged network connections and one for the logical bridge by itself. You can configure bridging from this icon. 1G. Adding/Removing Connections From Networked Bridges Adding a network connection to a preestablished network bridge is simplicity itself: Right click the appropriate connectoid in Network Connections and select Add to bridge. XP will churn and bubble a bit, and the deed will be done. The steps to remove a particular network connection from the bridge are equally simple: right click the connection you want removed and select remove from bridge. No Fuss, no muss! 1H. Enabling and Disabling Bridges Because a network bridge functions like a single network connection, you can choose to enable, and disable it just as you would with any network connection. When you do so, all the connections in the bridge sre enabled or disabled along with the bridge. To disable a network bridge, right click the bridge icon and choose disable. To enable, do the same but just hit enable. 1I. Removing a Network Bridge If you create a network bridge and it's not all that you hoped and dreamed for, its really easy to remove and return to your previous setup. To do this, you must first remove each of the network connections that are part of the bridge. Then right click the network bridge icon and choose delete. Select yes when XP asks you whether you're sure. ¨Du kunne no bare sagt det til meg da, istedet for å legge det ut her, sånn for å gjøre det enklere, slik at du kunne hjulpet meg.. Lenke til kommentar
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