![]() Hope this gets your brain throbbin (don't read past this point if you're a default kind of person, consult your heart might not be healthy enough for custom settings)ĭdwrt is the land of custom settings. In response to the OP, the man with sack so big between his legs, that he can also embrace his own not-knowing, and whip out his huge head so we can see how big his brain is. its default.Īs a wise man, less wise than y'all of course, once said, 'the beginning of wisdom is not knowing'īut i can see the wisdom of your approach, by passing the whole wisdom thing altogether by embracing the not-knowing and in an impressive and totally original lack of thought, you make passionate love for the longest minute ever, and 9 months later give the world your great gift ignorance. ![]() so beyond the IQ chart that yours isn't even a number, its just beyond. brilliantly intelligent, geniuses hiding in plain sight, far above the laymen lameness of other males. i hope you feel more secure in the obvious enormity of your manhood by having just put the op in his place. Wow you, and nearly every person before you are a bunch of useless, time wasting, disrespectful, dummies. I use the following OpenDNS servers in my router to occupy all three: Google already knows too much about me, why should I allow them to see what sites I visit through resolved DNS entries? Food for thought. I use OpenDNS for the redundancy and security features. With WIFI I just use AES non mixed key WPA2 with a 64 digit key. If you use torrents, under the Administration tab look for the setting IP Filter Settings (adjust these for P2P) I use an older router a WRT54GL so I'm not sure if you have the same options there. In the Additional DNSMasq Options box add the following: except you want the bridge to also handle DHCP.If you want to cache DNS entries into the router for a faster page loading time you could set the following: You are essentially turning the router into a bridge. Otherwise, follow the link in the above answer, or use the DD-WRT Support site and follow their instructions for how to manually configure the router. if not also the internal IP address itself as well. This means that when you connect a router to the DSL modem, you usually have to manually assign the gateway address of this Private Network to the router. What that means is if you check the IP address that is assigned to the computer connected to the DSL modem, it would be a Private Network address. I apologize to the holder of that address, whomever it may be. ![]() You typically see an address like 192.168.2.1 or something similar coming out of the DSL modem, as opposed to an external IP address like 69.172.43.86 or whatnot (I just created that randomly. They tend to be hard coded to pass out a single internal IP address to a device that is connected to them. The issue here is in how DSL modems work.ĭSL modems typically have router firmware built into them. As was mentioned in the earlier answer, the key here is manually setting up your internet connection in the router.
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