On Thu, Jun 4, 2009 at 1:28 AM, Dinesh Joshi wrote:
On Wed, Jun 3, 2009 at 1:21 PM, Rony wrote:
Dinesh Joshi wrote: Try this out. Set your router's MAC to the desktop MAC and use dhcp in the router's WAN. Let your router's LAN be a regular local LAN. In your desktop, setup a static IP of the LAN network. In your desktop DNS settings use the 4 DNS server entries in the same order as would be without the router. The procedure to log you on should work just the same. Once you are logged in, others in the LAN can use the net directly as they would in a router.
The whole point of having the router and DHCP is to avoid manual configuration. Unfortunately most routers support either 2 or at most 3 DNS server entries. If the DNS servers are correctly set in the router then theres no problem in logging in.
Did you try cloning the MAC of the desktop to the router? I noticed in the other case where Reliance wimax had 4 dns entries but after changing the mac of the router, it was able to connect properly. The router was a Netgear one.