1.
I connect the modem cable to uplink port...
Technically, the modem should be connected to the WAN port of the router; the router's uplink port is for stacking/chaining the router with another router/switch/hub.
2.
This is what I got from ipconfig
win xp pro laptop
ip 24.100.126.68
subnet mask 255.255.248.0
default gateway 24.100.120.1
dhcp server 24.153.22.139
win 98 second edition
ip 24.100.127.103
subnet mask 255.255.248.0
default gateway 24.100.120.1
dhcp server 24.153.22.139
Your router does not appear to be correctly configured for NAT (Network Address Translation).
The IP addresses listed above by ipconfig are
not addresses in one of the private, non-routable address ranges; they are Internet-legal addresses registered to Rogers Cable. You will need to configure the LAN-side of the router to assign private IP addresses to the machines on your network instead of "passing through" the IP settings obtained from Rogers. As it stands, your router appears to be acting as a simple switch, and as Rogers only assigns/allows you one IP, that configuration will not work. Typical internal (LAN-side) NAT schemes usually use IPs within the private 192.168. or 10. address ranges.
See the following article for more information on NAT and why you need to use it if you are going to have more than one computer connected to an ISP which only allows you a single IP:
http://www.jpsdomain.org/networking/nat.html
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