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Win 7 and bridging network

C

Canuck57

Flightless Bird
Here is a challenge that maybe someone has tried.

I have a TV that can do Ethernet and needs routing to the Internet. But
no Ethernet near by.

I am going to connect a computer to the TV, and it has both a Ethernet
and a Wireless card in it. Wireless isn't the issue, the PC uses the
wireless flawlessly.

So the question becomes, with Vista or Win 7 Home Premium can I connect
the TV to the PC's Ethernet, and have it route through to the wireless
to negate the need to run cable?

If Vista/Win 7 can do routing, can it do a true Ethernet bridge to get
the DHCP/DNS from the wireless router or do I need to setup a second
network of 2 systems?

Tips, tricks appreciated...
 
P

Paul

Flightless Bird
Canuck57 wrote:
>
> Here is a challenge that maybe someone has tried.
>
> I have a TV that can do Ethernet and needs routing to the Internet. But
> no Ethernet near by.
>
> I am going to connect a computer to the TV, and it has both a Ethernet
> and a Wireless card in it. Wireless isn't the issue, the PC uses the
> wireless flawlessly.
>
> So the question becomes, with Vista or Win 7 Home Premium can I connect
> the TV to the PC's Ethernet, and have it route through to the wireless
> to negate the need to run cable?
>
> If Vista/Win 7 can do routing, can it do a true Ethernet bridge to get
> the DHCP/DNS from the wireless router or do I need to setup a second
> network of 2 systems?
>
> Tips, tricks appreciated...


Something like this perhaps ? There may be a restriction on the value
of the subnet on the Ethernet side. I think when I tested this a long time
ago, the Ethernet link on the right, ended up as 192.168.0.x . I don't know
if that'll be an issue for you or not.

http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows7/Using-ICS-Internet-Connection-Sharing

What I tested was like this:

ADSL modem ------- Computer #1 ---------- Computer #2
ICS

I could web surf from Computer #2 to the Internet. The reason I was
using this setup, is the Ethernet segment on the right was running
at a 1 Gigabit rate, and I was doing bandwidth testing between
Computer #1 and #2, just to see whether I could run such a link
flat out or not.

In that test, Computer #1 had two Ethernet interfaces, but you
could equally well mix two other types of interfaces as far as
I know. The only thing you can't do any more, in Windows 7,
is connect Computer #1 to Computer #2, with a Firewire network
at 400Mbit/sec. That is no longer supported. In an OS like WinXP or
Win2K, the right hand network wire could have been Firewire.

Paul
 
C

Canuck57

Flightless Bird
On 10/10/2010 5:31 PM, Paul wrote:
> Canuck57 wrote:
>>
>> Here is a challenge that maybe someone has tried.
>>
>> I have a TV that can do Ethernet and needs routing to the Internet.
>> But no Ethernet near by.
>>
>> I am going to connect a computer to the TV, and it has both a Ethernet
>> and a Wireless card in it. Wireless isn't the issue, the PC uses the
>> wireless flawlessly.
>>
>> So the question becomes, with Vista or Win 7 Home Premium can I
>> connect the TV to the PC's Ethernet, and have it route through to the
>> wireless to negate the need to run cable?
>>
>> If Vista/Win 7 can do routing, can it do a true Ethernet bridge to get
>> the DHCP/DNS from the wireless router or do I need to setup a second
>> network of 2 systems?
>>
>> Tips, tricks appreciated...

>
> Something like this perhaps ? There may be a restriction on the value
> of the subnet on the Ethernet side. I think when I tested this a long time
> ago, the Ethernet link on the right, ended up as 192.168.0.x . I don't know
> if that'll be an issue for you or not.
>
> http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows7/Using-ICS-Internet-Connection-Sharing
>
>
> What I tested was like this:
>
> ADSL modem ------- Computer #1 ---------- Computer #2
> ICS
>
> I could web surf from Computer #2 to the Internet. The reason I was
> using this setup, is the Ethernet segment on the right was running
> at a 1 Gigabit rate, and I was doing bandwidth testing between
> Computer #1 and #2, just to see whether I could run such a link
> flat out or not.
>
> In that test, Computer #1 had two Ethernet interfaces, but you
> could equally well mix two other types of interfaces as far as
> I know. The only thing you can't do any more, in Windows 7,
> is connect Computer #1 to Computer #2, with a Firewire network
> at 400Mbit/sec. That is no longer supported. In an OS like WinXP or
> Win2K, the right hand network wire could have been Firewire.
>
> Paul


Paul, that is exactly what I want to do except the ADSL modem is my
internal router and Computer #2 is the TV. Going to give this a try.
 
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