On Monday, June 17, 2019 01:05:54 PM Gene Heskett wrote: > I am lucky, my ISP uses the connecting MAC to translate to a fixed ipv4, > that has not changed in 6 years. So my web page address in my sig has > not changed in 6 years even if I swap the router as my standby unit has > the good ones MAC cloned into it. So I get a registered STATIC domain > for almost zip compared to the cost and monkey business associated with > keeping a dynamic address uptodate globally.
Interesting, and I think I have the same kind of luck. (When I checked several years ago, the ipv4 address from my ISP was the same whenever I checked for a fairly long period. I'm checking again, and hoping to find my notes of that address from those years ago.) But, the main point of this reply is to ask you to provide a little more detail of how you set up everything so that you can host your web page that way. I guess I'd have to set up Apache or some similar web server -- I guess I did that once upon a time, and should be able to do it again. How did you get the information about your webserver (host name and IP address) into the DNS servers? Did you have to pay someone to set that up and then pay a continuing fee to maintain those entries? Thanks for any advice you can offer!