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Subject:
From:
Dave & Patt Nager <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Personal Computer Hardware discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Sat, 12 Apr 2008 19:46:48 -0400
Content-Type:
Text/Plain
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Text/Plain (114 lines)
Those are IP Addresses and can be assigned and are determined by software.

MAC Addresses are unique and permanent and do not have dots in them. They
belong to the hardware.

Google MAC Address.





-------Original Message-------

 

From: Dean Kukral

Date: 4/12/2008 5:54:39 PM

To: [log in to unmask]

Subject: Re: [PCBUILD] MAC address corrupted? Follow-up

 

That is just the point.

 

Ever since my upgrades, the "physical address" - as given by the two
different computers when running "ipconfig /all" under a

command prompt - are the same.  Somehow the bios seem to be taking what I
assume is burnt into the network controller's circuitry

and changing it to the same physical address.  Either that or they are
actually changing the circuitry.

 

In either case, I have assigned in the router two different DHCP numbers to
two different MAC addresses.  To the old MAC address is

assigned the number 192.168.0.150 and to the new "MAC address" is assigned
192.168.0.151.  The number that gets assigned is the

latter!  It seems to me that the router thinks that my new physical address
is the actual MAC address.

 

I am still wondering what is going on here.  ?  I thought that MAC addresses
were "supposed" to be unique and permanent.

 

Dean

 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Dave & Patt Nager" <[log in to unmask]>

To: <[log in to unmask]>

Sent: Saturday, April 12, 2008 4:03 PM

Subject: Re: [PCBUILD] MAC address corrupted? Follow-up

 

 

MAC Addresses are unique to each Network Device.

 

-------Original Message-------

 

From: Dean Kukral

Date: 4/12/2008 2:26:38 PM

To: [log in to unmask]

Subject: Re: [PCBUILD] MAC address corrupted? Follow-up

 

I just discovered that I was wrong.  Each of our computers now has new MAC

addresses, which are the same on all four network

controllers except that my two end with a 03 and 04 and her two end with a

03 and a 04, so we should be able to have unique MAC

addresses - at least as far as our lan is concerned.  One of us will be an

03 and the other will be an 04.  :)

 

 

----- Original Message -----

From: "Dean Kukral" <[log in to unmask]>

To: <[log in to unmask]>

Sent: Saturday, April 12, 2008 12:59 PM

Subject: [PCBUILD] MAC address corrupted?

 

 

My wife and I both have ASUS Striker II Formula motherboards - which I do

NOT recommend to anybody.

 

They have been buggy from the start, so when a new BIOS (drivers, too) came

out, I was eager to load the BIOS and drivers.

 

Now, however, I find that I have the same MAC address on my motherboard's

network controller (I only checked one) and on both my

wife's network controllers.

 

Does this make sense to anyone?

 

So, I loaded the old BIOS to my computer, but I still have the same MAC

address on the network controller!!!

 

Could this cause networking conflicts?  Both computers seem to be assigned

different DHCP sets.  However, my wife's computer has

downloaded multiple copies of emails.

 

Could this be malware related ( I mean malware other than ASUS's BIOS!! )?

 

Do you suppose that a simple network card will solve this problem for us?  I

suppose that the actual MAC addresses are irrelevant,

since the unique DHCP addresses are what is important?

 

(I wonder if people all over the world that used these new BIOS are now

saddled with the same MAC address.)

 

Could the nForce drivers for the 780i chip be causing this, so that going to

the old drivers would help?  (I will probably try

that.)

 

As you can see, I am a bit stymied by all this.

 

Dean Kukral

 

 

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