MournSanity
Diamond Member
- Feb 24, 2002
- 3,126
- 0
- 0
Originally posted by: MournSanity
UC Santa Barbara's residence hall internet is also called ResNet. Interesting.
Originally posted by: CorporateRecreation
Originally posted by: CitizenDoug
Originally posted by: CorporateRecreation
Clone your MAC address to the router.
Could you elaborate? The guy down at the "ResNet" office was getting all excited about my MAC address the other day when my internet stopped working.
I kept telling him, no, it's a PC, not a MAC! Lol.
lol...
a MAC address is a hardware code burned into the firmware of your NIC. It is a hex number unique to your card, unique so routing can actually work. I'm not going to explain the process of routing to you but I've give you enough info... the code can be entered into your router so as far as your resnet is concerned, the packets are hitting that MAC address (your nic, so it thinks) yet your router handles all internal network routing on the inside without their knowledge.
To be honest it's not even neccesary but if you're super paranoid it might be a good option.
IM me if you want more in depth, this is my quick 101![]()
Originally posted by: RossMAN
Originally posted by: CorporateRecreation
Originally posted by: CitizenDoug
Originally posted by: CorporateRecreation
Clone your MAC address to the router.
Could you elaborate? The guy down at the "ResNet" office was getting all excited about my MAC address the other day when my internet stopped working.
I kept telling him, no, it's a PC, not a MAC! Lol.
lol...
a MAC address is a hardware code burned into the firmware of your NIC. It is a hex number unique to your card, unique so routing can actually work. I'm not going to explain the process of routing to you but I've give you enough info... the code can be entered into your router so as far as your resnet is concerned, the packets are hitting that MAC address (your nic, so it thinks) yet your router handles all internal network routing on the inside without their knowledge.
To be honest it's not even neccesary but if you're super paranoid it might be a good option.
IM me if you want more in depth, this is my quick 101![]()
You're pretty damn thorough with your "quick 101's" :lips:
Originally posted by: jewno
i got a router in my room but one computer's down so...
but hub works the best fyi.
Originally posted by: jewno
i got a router in my room but one computer's down so...
but hub works the best fyi.
Originally posted by: Syringer
Don't you people have roommates? People here use switches/ports.
Originally posted by: rahvin
Why do you need a router, jesus, just use a hub or a switch. You don't need a router.
Originally posted by: CorporateRecreation
Clone your MAC address to the router.
Originally posted by: kami333
Originally posted by: rahvin
Why do you need a router, jesus, just use a hub or a switch. You don't need a router.
Some schools make you register MAC addreses or otherwise limit access.
My school I just used a switch, they didn't do any registering or things like that.
Originally posted by: rahvin
Originally posted by: kami333
Originally posted by: rahvin
Why do you need a router, jesus, just use a hub or a switch. You don't need a router.
Some schools make you register MAC addreses or otherwise limit access.
My school I just used a switch, they didn't do any registering or things like that.
You would still have a MAC address on any computer using the service. All the switch/hub does is turn one port into X ports so you can have more cables connected. They are completely transparent to the network.
