Hi,

Some applications are written with a particular address in mind, some people put 
security lists on servers and applications.  When working across a network with a lot 
of structural changes constantly happening (Government Networks as an example when 
there is Departmental or Agency mergers.) often the "private addresses" used is the 
same within two merging organisations.  This can create issues for accessing servers.  
It is therefore important to hard map NAT in these circumstances but that requires a 
one to one relationship.  Why put in the extra level of complexity.  (DHCP often has 
similar security issues)

Just a thought

Teunis
Hobart, Tasmania
Australia

On Wednesday, January 10, 2001 at 12:34:49 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> How does any application no if it's registerd or non-registered? or real 
> address?
> 
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