|
changing your ip add? (pg. 2)
|
View this Thread in Original format
| sunrise3500 |
| quote: | Originally posted by BinaryRefined
im on broadband bigpond
tried disconnecting my modem, still has same ip |
ergh
WHAT IS YOUR CONNECTION
ie do you have ADSL or CABLE?
if you have bigpond cable you can get a new ip very very easily |
|
|
| BinaryRefined |
| bigpond cable |
|
|
| sunrise3500 |
| quote: | Originally posted by BinaryRefined
bigpond cable |
ok cool
you've got 2 ways
firstly logout (otherwise you'll have to wait about 20 minutes before you can log in again - it'll say max simultaneous connections bla bla)
and then your options are
1) You need to connect to your modem with a different MAC address - if you're using a hardware router, get it to spoof a different mac address, or if the modem is connected directly to a pc, connect it to a different network card
the other way is
2) log into your modem's webpage interface (http://192.168.100.1)
goto the configuration page
change the frequency (frequencies start at 561mhz and go up in 6mhz increments... there should be atleast four available for you)
click save, and then click restart and wait for it
if it doesnt sync (ie all the lights green and stable) within a few minutes to the new frequency (probably take < 1 minute), try a different frequency
you'll now have a new ip, all you gotta do is log back in |
|
|
| rez |
I was fine using proxy servers at work...
They now have banned any form of 'anonymisers' ??? nfi what that is... but yeah all available proxy servers are now banned
Is there any other way of accessing banned sites? My work uses 'Smart Filter' if thats of any assistance
PLEASE HELP :) |
|
|
| djway |
| quote: | Originally posted by sunrise3500
ok cool
you've got 2 ways
firstly logout (otherwise you'll have to wait about 20 minutes before you can log in again - it'll say max simultaneous connections bla bla)
and then your options are
1) You need to connect to your modem with a different MAC address - if you're using a hardware router, get it to spoof a different mac address, or if the modem is connected directly to a pc, connect it to a different network card
the other way is
2) log into your modem's webpage interface (http://192.168.100.1)
goto the configuration page
change the frequency (frequencies start at 561mhz and go up in 6mhz increments... there should be atleast four available for you)
click save, and then click restart and wait for it
if it doesnt sync (ie all the lights green and stable) within a few minutes to the new frequency (probably take < 1 minute), try a different frequency
you'll now have a new ip, all you gotta do is log back in |
Respect. That's not general netadmin skills, You work 4 a broadband supplier?
--djway |
|
|
| sunrise3500 |
| quote: | Originally posted by djway
Respect. That's not general netadmin skills, You work 4 a broadband supplier?
--djway |
not really netadmin skills
and I don't work for any broadband supplier and never have, but if you can get me a part time job, ill take it :D |
|
|
| DaveBegic |
| i donno, i didnt think you could change something's mac address seing as its the unique identifier for a network device. |
|
|
| jizza |
| i hate it when amateur kingdom wants me to pay for my pr0n. :( |
|
|
| sunrise3500 |
| quote: | Originally posted by DaveBegic
i donno, i didnt think you could change something's mac address seing as its the unique identifier for a network device. |
A lot of hardware routers support spoofing mac addresses, this allows you to spoof the same mac as the network adapter of your pc, or to whatever... |
|
|
| jizza |
| must you use the word spoof? :confused: |
|
|
| sunrise3500 |
| quote: | Originally posted by jizza
must you use the word spoof? :confused: |
yes, yes I must. as that is the word used |
|
|
| djway |
| quote: | Originally posted by DaveBegic
i donno, i didnt think you could change something's mac address seing as its the unique identifier for a network device. |
Dave, basically anything other then windows can spoof it's MAC. Solaris can do it, High Avability network devices both share the same MAC so no ARP requests are lost.
Here's a working example for Solaris 2.6
ifconfig hme0 ether 8:0:20:0:0:1
The way sunrise3500's tip works in the case of the Surfboard modems, based on the above, the Surfboards, hand out a pool(max 4) of unique IP's based on the MAC of the device connected to them (the Surfboard's MAC never changes). Makes sense.
--djway |
|
|
|
|