Sharing @Home Cable Modem???
#1
Posted 17 May 2000 - 05:14 AM
Thanks,
HNC
other info:
OS is win2k final. The cable modem is connected directly to the hub. We have 4 PCs and an extra network card if we need it.
#2
Posted 18 May 2000 - 01:50 PM
Put 2 NIC cards in one machine. Now take the cable modem and hook it into one of the NIC cards. Take a line and hook the 2nd NIC card to the hub.
You should now have all 4 computers hooked to the hub and 1 hooked into the cable modem.
You should be able to use internet connection sharing on the 1st NIC card. (The one that goes out to the cable modem)
Hope this helps.
#3
Posted 18 May 2000 - 04:33 PM
Also, is there anyway we would all be able to see each other on the network if cox won't allow us to use file and printer sharing?
HNC
#4
Posted 18 May 2000 - 06:31 PM
I have found that the people at Cox@home have absolutely no clue as to what they are talking about. As a matter of fact I had my modem die on me a couple of weeks ago and the tech that came out said he had only seen a couple of computers with Windows 2000 on them. I had to show him how to set it up. (Now that is scary)
As far as games go, I have my one machine set up with 2 NIC cards and hooked into the cable modem. (Like I described in the earlier post) It has the computer name that Cox@home gave me and I have different accounts on it (1 for me and 1 for the wife). I then have my machine that is hooked into the hub and it is named whatever I want. I just had to make sure that my workgroup was @home. My wife can see me, I can surf the web through her machine, we play games together all the time, and there is very little degredation of speed on the net.
Heck, most sites are slow anyway, I have found that I will never use all of the bandwidth that I have with a cable modem and I highly doubt that 4 machines will do it either. Give it a shot and have all 4 of you surfing and see if it slows anything down. Post your results because I am curious myself.
Thanks.
#5
Posted 19 May 2000 - 04:54 PM
I have a couple of other questions though. If I install both NICs in my machine and use ICS so the other PCs can connect to the net will that slow down our connection? If we all turn on file and printer sharing will everyone in the @home network be able to see our PCs?
Thanks again,
HNC
#6
Posted 19 May 2000 - 09:34 PM
Then, since each machine should get its own IP address each one should work fine and should be able to access the internet/games/etc. The only cases in which you need to use ICS is if you have less IP addresses available than you have machines which need to be connected to the internet.
If you enable File and Print sharing on the PCs then you should be able to see each other and share files as long as you are all in the SAME workgroup and have DIFFERENT computer names. Most (good) cable modems block port 139 (which is used for file sharing) so you should not have to worry about your whole neighborhood seeing your PCs, but just in case you should probably set it as Read-Only access or set a password.
Also, about the slowness you are experiencing when all 3 of you play games, it is most likely due to your hub. Since it broadcasts each packet to all 3 of your computer and to the cable modem, many many collisions will occur which will force packets to be re-sent and thus slow down all of your games. The only way to fix this problem would be to replace the hub with a switch, although that would be a bit more expensive.
I hope this is the information you were looking for...
#7
Posted 19 May 2000 - 11:50 PM
Would I get better performance from games online using ICS? Or would it be better to setup a server? Also how much is a switch and where could i get one?
#8
Posted 22 May 2000 - 06:44 AM
1) Buy an extra IP address from cable co (which IF they let you do it, would be about $5-$7 extra per month)
2) Set up ICS (or any other type of NAT like sygate) and use it to masquerade the IPs of all the internal computers except one. Unfortunately this comes with many problems as most games do not work properly through the ICS gateway and so you may only be able to play on 1 or 2 comps at a time (which is not good).
3) Keep the setup the way you have it, and run a server on the machine without a real IP address. This way all 4 people would be able to connect to the machine BUT nobody from the internet would be able to play on your server.
4) Run the server on one of the machines with a real IP. This way people from the internet would be able to connect to the server, but the 4th comp without a real IP would not be able to (I think).
These are about the only options as I see it, but perhaps someone else may be able to shed some more light on it...
And regarding the switch, you can pick one up at www.buy.com pretty cheaply (look in the network products area), but I am still not quite sure if the hub is what is slowing you down (could be a bad network card or somethin)
#9
Posted 22 May 2000 - 07:51 PM
if your trying to play games on a cable modem with more than 1 person on the cable modem it will LAG BAD!! Your better off getting dsl if its available because DSL unlike @home isnt full of oversaturated nodes, not giving you high pings when you play games.
As for the IP problems put 2 nics in one machine then get winroute
#10
Posted 22 May 2000 - 10:04 PM
None of these games use more than 20kbytes/s at maximum bandwidth. I have run three Q3A machines through the same cable modem and noticed negligible ping increases (10-15), which I attribute to ICS overhead, not network or cable modem issues. My cable modem (mediaone LA) maintains consistent transfers of 150-200kbytes/s so this does not seem unreasonable. My network is 100base through hubs, dual NICs on the ICS machine.
So, I'd say try the ICS solution and see if you notice a problem. If it doesn't, all it takes to disable under W2k is a clearing of one checkbox...
:}
#11
Posted 24 May 2000 - 04:48 PM
Thanks for all the help.
HNC
Other info:
File and printer sharing is installed on all PCs. We're using 192.168.0.X for the IP addresses and 255.255.255.0 for the subnet mask. Both IPX and TCP/IP are installed on all PCs along with Client for Microsoft Networks.
#12
Posted 24 May 2000 - 05:48 PM
Mine was able to still connect to games even though it was not in Network Neighborhood.
Hope this helps.
#13
Posted 24 May 2000 - 07:17 PM
#14
Posted 25 May 2000 - 04:23 PM
HNC
#15
Posted 25 May 2000 - 06:14 PM
I have dsl, and it is basicly the same as cable.
Get a linksys dsl/cable router. On buy.com they are about 150.
With the linksys router, you plug your modem into it, and then you plug your eithernet cards to it from all the different computers.
It is fast and easy, and best of all, if you were to shutdown the computer everyone on the network is not affected like with the 2 nic solution.

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