You can do this, but you need third-party software to make it work. Also,
the Windows NT drivers have a bug that prevents them from operating
correctly with a NIC that's set for full-duplex (because I figured that
would be your next question).
        - Dennis

-----Original Message-----
From: Chuck Larrieu [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, July 19, 2000 9:16 PM
To: Bruce; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Technical Question


I was a bit curious about that myself. Of course I am Windows-centric.

The one thing I never did understand in the WinNT world was why one could
not have two NIC's in a server, and assign both NIC's into the same subnet.
Could be done easily in the IPX world on a Netware box.

Any thoughts?

Chuck

-----Original Message-----
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of
Bruce
Sent:   Wednesday, July 19, 2000 8:39 PM
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        Re: Technical Question

Please tell me how to assign two IP addresses to a single NIC.



""Xiaoyu Zeng"" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
8l5jcu$rg6$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8l5jcu$rg6$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> You can assign those two IP address to the single NIC in the PC, without
> adding another NIC.
>
> "Bruce" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
> 8l5ioh$pj9$[EMAIL PROTECTED]">news:8l5ioh$pj9$[EMAIL PROTECTED]...
> >
> > I need some technical advice. We connect customers to our internet
service
> > over 100 Mbs Ethernet. We assign the customer private IP addresses which
> our
> > router translates to a public IP. We configure the customer PC's with
> these
> > private IP addresses. This one particular customer has one PC that
> accesses
> > a Lotus Notes Server in NY over a point-to-point frame relay connection.
> > This connection is provided by AT&T and they have a router attached to
the
> > customers Ethernet hub which    serves as the gateway to this service.
The
> > router has an IP address of 32.82.221.33  mask 255.255.255.240 and the
IP
> > address of the one PC that accesses it is 32.82.221.37 mask
> 255.255.255.240.
> > Our router is also attached to their Ethernet hub but it has an IP
address
> > of 172.16.228.1 mask 255.255.255.0. The customer wants this PC to access
> > both routers. If we change the IP address to be in our network it wont
be
> > able to communicate with AT&T's router. I considered using two network
> cards
> > in the PC, one with the AT&T IP address and one with ours. I would have
to
> > install NT Workstation to make the PC support two network cards. First,
> will
> > that work and Second, is there another solution besides changing IP
> > addresses of the routers.
> >
> > Any help would be appreciated.
> >
> >
> > Bruce
> > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
> >
> > ___________________________________
> > UPDATED Posting Guidelines: http://www.groupstudy.com/list/guide.html
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>
>
> ___________________________________
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