On Thu 15 Oct 2015 at 22:10:43 +0100, Joe wrote: > On Thu, 15 Oct 2015 21:58:21 +0100 > Brian <a...@cityscape.co.uk> wrote: > > > On Thu 15 Oct 2015 at 21:44:56 +0100, Lisi Reisz wrote: > > > > > On Thursday 15 October 2015 21:38:16 Brian wrote: > > > > No you don't. You only have change the printers's setup to match > > > > the network it is on. You know how to do that with telnet. > > > > > > Brian - > > > > > > Could you give some hints as to how two separate devices can share > > > one IP without some sort of routing? > > > > It isn't a matter of sharing one IP but of being on the same network > > in order to communicate. From an earlier post we have > > > > Through Control Panel, I learned that the computer had ip address > > 192.168.100.3. The HP2100 printed a configuration report which > > indicated an ip address of 192.168.1.201 > > > > It seems that the consensus is that 192.168.1.201 is a fixed IP for > > the printer. We will go with that. > > > > If the printer is to communicate with the computer it needs to have an > > IP like 192.168.100.3.201. Change its IP with telnet. A moment's job. > > > > I assume that was a typo. I believe Windows does allow multiple IP > addresses on one adaptor, but I haven't tried it, and I suspect MS > would describe it as 'unsupported'. If you move the printer into the > 192.168.3. network there must be a risk than another customer of the > same ISP will be given whatever address you choose.
Yes. 192.168.100.201