Running Wireless and Wired eth connections at the same time

sam bedouglas at earthlink.net
Thu Oct 18 03:58:23 UTC 2007


but see john...

i wasn't asking for your information in this case.

i was describing the setup that i implemented, that provided the solution
that worked for me, for the setup that i described.

as i've stated, you're more than welcome to craft your own network and the
solution that you would implement.

peace..


-----Original Message-----
From: fedora-list-bounces at redhat.com
[mailto:fedora-list-bounces at redhat.com]On Behalf Of John Summerfield
Sent: Wednesday, October 17, 2007 7:27 PM
To: For users of Fedora
Subject: Re: Running Wireless and Wired eth connections at the same time


sam wrote:
> so john...
>
> in your case.. when the user uses google to find an answer.. what happens
> when the user gets conflicting information from different sites.

Then a sensible user might post to the question, outline what she's
done, the conflicting information found, the results of trying out one
or more of the pieces of advice.

Then, seeing that the user has made a decent effort, more (and more
capable) people will respond, and not rehash the same ground.

>
> you see, you never ask if the user has used google, or where they got
their
> information, you simply assume that the user is asking without doing any
> initial research.

The onus is on the user. If you want good advice, make sure that you can
filter out the nonsense, and there is quite a deal of that on any list,
as people begin to help.

heck, i spout a bit myself sometimes, most recently not realising that
while this fails:
   /bin/echo /*/*/*/*
this does not:
   echo /*/*/*/*

A lot of people here will try to answer your problem when they should be
asking for more information.

>
> in the case of this situation, the solution proposed is as i stated,
freely
> used/provided on a number of sites..

It doesn't mean it's the right solution. Maquerading (more properly,
Network Address Translation (NAT)) is good when you're connecting your
SOHO LAN to the Internet and you want the LAN protected.

If you want to run servers of any kind on both sides to serve the other
(and this would include Windows desktops sharing files), then NAT is
wrong. Mostly, when people configure a router, the would like avery
machine on each side to see all on the other.


--

Cheers
John

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