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Nahlásit problém s překladem
never.....never has been never will be......
I am in this topic with the same problem. What do I need to change?
Edit: I've tried 192.168.0.1, 192.168.1.1, 192.168.0.254, and literally all the others listed on the internet, and one of them should work, but they don't.
No idea what you mean, but if you mean the router's address, it should be listed as the DEFAULT GATEWAY address in Windows when you use the "ipconfig" command in the terminal / command line.
Those addresses are not always used by ISPs on their equipment. You can find it by using the IPCONFIG command in the terminal and you should see the IPv4 & IPv6 of you nearest gateway (router).
If a router is behind another router, then you will have to connect to said router (Router #1 you actually access) directly, then check it's status page or use the same tool directly connected to the router that has internet access.
These days, some routers come up with some really weird numbers. This is a security measure to avoid using the typical defaults. It's best to use the text name, such as http://router.asus.com
Oh my goodness. Damn...I totally forgot about that. I'm an idiot sorry
thats the router ip
I may have mis-labeled them, but they taped off the blue port which I assumed was the input. It's labeled WAN. It is indeed a AX10.
I guess I will contact them to be sure, I don't like not having access to something I purchased myself.
Thanks for the knowledge, _I_, Pocahatness, and everyone else.
reset it to defaults, and plug it into the wan port (hold its reset button for 30sec)
then log into the router, and change its login password write it down and stick to to the router
and disable wan/remote access to its config, so only those connecting to it on lan/wifi can config it
then setup its wifi as needed
but they do give you a new one every few years
buying a router is still the best thing you can do to protect your network
the op has his own router, but the isp tech configured it as a switch/ap not router
I will need to do some researching to figure all that he means, but what do you guys think of this?
The 192 address he gave me and the pw shows DHCP off, like he says. However, that's not the ip address I get from ipconfig which is the standard 192.168.1.1. The .1.1 address takes me to UISP, not TP-Link like the address he gave me. On the tp-link address, it shows nothing is connected. This confirms my router is a switch, right? So, is the ISP modem the router instead?
And if the modem is the router, double nat would occur if my tp link had DHCP on, correct? It is basically passing through the tplink to their modem/router?
If I reset my router, the DHCP would be on and I'd need to plug into WAN. Can I adjust settings then de-activate DHCP, then plug back into LAN and avoid double nat?
Last question, is port forwarding completely out of the question for me, since the modem is in the ISP's control?
You might want to change the router's DNS to Cloudflare instead of the ISP's defaul.
log into the router with the ip he gave you
use its admin page to reset it to defaults, and let it reboot
change the dns servers to 1.1.1.1 (cloudfare), 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 (google)
they are faster and another step to prevent the isp from tracking sites you visit
also change the modems lan ip to 195.168.2.1, so its different from the modem
(you will need to reboot, or unplug and plug in the lan cable again on all devices for new lan ip changes to take effect)
then plug the modem into the routers wan/internet port
port forwarding is only needed if you are hosting games where other connect to your internet ip
if you need to do that, and forward ports
log into the modem 192.168.1.1, and change it to bridge mode, then it will pass the internet ip to your router, and work strictly as a modem
then when you need to forward ports, the router already passes all incoming traffic to your router