Les, if you want to claim that what I said is "Not entirely true",
please say something that contradicts me.
If you have two machines connected by a cross-over cable, then to
"Just connect one to the internet", you need a second network
connection in that machine[*], and to allow the other PC to use it,
you need ICS or some other gateway software on the machine with the
second connector. And that's exactly my case #1.
Dave Gillett
[*] The second connector might be a modem or serial/USB port, but
since I believe we were given that he has a cable-modem, it should be
a second NIC in this particular instance.
[PERHAPS what needs clarification in my post is that in case #1, you
still need a single NIC in every other machine -- the two NICs in the
gateway don't allow you to connect a client without its own.]
On 29 Oct 2001, at 15:28, Les Barnes wrote:
> Not entirely true Dave. I ran two PCs for years with a NIC in each one
> connected with a CROSSOVER cable. Just connect one to the internet and
> you are all set.
>
> Les Barnes
>
> [log in to unmask] wrote:
> >
> > On 25 Oct 2001, at 12:12, Brian L. Sanburn wrote:
> >
> > > On the one hand I've read that I need two NICs in the Win98
> > > machine, one in the Win95 and a router, and in other places just a
> > > NIC in each PC with a router; I need MSs ICS setup on the Win98SE
> > > PC and in other places I've read no such thing.
> >
> > There are two basic configurations:
> >
> > 1. TWO NICs in the ICS machine, NO router.
> >
> > 2. Router, one NIC in each machine, NO ICS.
> >
> > You need a *gateway*; this is either a router, or a PC running ICS
> > (or other gateway software) with two NICs. No PC besides the gateway
> > needs two NICs.
> >
> > Dave Gillett
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