WAN Help

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WAN Help

 
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  #1
Jun 21st, 2006
My friend and I have been trying to setup a wan forever, but we just can't get it. I wan to be able to connect to his home network trhough the internet to be able to play multiplayer games like Age of Empires, Starcraft, Halo, etc. Can anyone help?
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Re: WAN Help

 
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Jun 27th, 2006
You need to tell us a lot about both your network, and his, before anyone can answer the question(s). What conenciton, what router or modem, what platform, what security... etc etc
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Re: WAN Help

 
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Jun 28th, 2006
Okay, I have a WGT624 v3 netgear router. My isp is comcast. I have several computers in my network, including an xbox. I just have the windows firewall security and my router's firewall. My friend has a belkin router, don't know the model, and his isp is comcast too. So could he just connect to my network using VPN? We're both using xp home.
Last edited by TheNSS; Jun 28th, 2006 at 12:05 pm.
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Re: WAN Help

 
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Jun 28th, 2006
no, he can't just connect. Several things are in the way.

1) Comcast. Do they allow clients to route to one another? Quite a few ISPs don't, because this is how viruses spread.

2) ideally the two of you need two different IP ranges - if you are 192.168.1.x internally, then he needs to be 192.168.2.x

3) your routers need to pass packets to and fro, either because they have open and forwarded ports, or because they make a VPN tunnel with one another. Can you see indications in the docs for either bit of kit that they support this?
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Re: WAN Help

 
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Jun 29th, 2006
i'm not sure comcast allows this. His ip range is 192.168.2.x and mine is 192.168.1.x, now how do you do the rest?
Last edited by TheNSS; Jun 29th, 2006 at 12:49 pm.
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Re: WAN Help

 
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Jun 29th, 2006
you do the rest by:

- getting an ISP that allows you to do it. Their help-desk should tell you if this is the case, or not.


- having routers which include VPN capability and come with the relevant instructions

- having ISP accounts which provide reasonably well-fixed addresses. Real, eternally fixed static IP costs extra, but most ISPs don't change the address of a subscriber all that often, and you can use services like DynDNS (www.dyndns.net, from memory) to keep your address known by your counterparty. Some routers (I use Drayteks for this) support DynDNS update automatically.
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