Another issue with the Asus - when it was functioning as a standard
router, was that it would not enable IPv6. The only way it could be used
for both IPv4 and 6, was to configure it as an AP. There are settings in
its firmware to enable IPv6 when used as a standard router, but none of
the settings worked.

Is it the general opinion that a printer should be directly connected to
the computer, rather than via Ethernet/WiFi?


On 6/24/22 20:16, Jerry Feldman wrote:
The issue you raise is privacy. If you use the isp provided gateway or your
own replacement, devices will get up addresses from that gateway's nat. If
you get a router, and set it up to manage your lan, you are insulating your
devices from the network. Of course, if you want a device accessible from
the outside, that is a different story.

--
Jerry Feldman <[email protected]>
Boston Linux and Unix http://www.blu.org
PGP key id: 6F6BB6E7
PGP Key fingerprint: 0EDC 2FF5 53A6 8EED 84D1  3050 5715 B88D 6F6
B B6E7

On Fri, Jun 24, 2022, 7:51 PM <[email protected]> wrote:

Comcast will allow a customer to use a personally-owned modem, if this
is what you're referring to. They have a list online of the approved
modems, that I presume were tested to ensure they work.

I have an Asus router that is configured as an access point, which I
have used in the past. As an AP, the devices on the internal network
would pull IP's from the Comcast gateway, but are physically/WiFi
connected to the AP. A negative to this, is that (unlike the Comcast
gateway) the router/AP will not allow the same SSID to be used for both
2.4 and 5.0 GHz WiFI.


On 6/24/22 19:04, John Abreau wrote:
I generally recommend minimizing the amount of trust you give to your
ISP. I've switched between different ISPs over the years, and if the
ISP insists on providing its own wifi router, I would connect only one
device to that router: my own personal wifi router.

My internal home network is always under my personal administrative
control, and I only use the ISP to transport bits back and forth
between my private network and the public Internet.

On Fri, Jun 24, 2022 at 4:50 PM <[email protected]> wrote:

     My printer is an OfficeJet Pro 8210 and it will prompt to download
and
     install a software upgrade, if available, when it's connected to the
     network. It has upgraded the software once, since I've had it. I
     do not
     know how often it checks HP for updates.



     On 6/24/22 15:54, Ben Kallus wrote:
     > It's worth noting the security risks that come with network
     printers.
     > Their firmwares is not often updated, and has been shown to be
     > insecure time and time again.^1 You may be better off connecting
     it to
     > a computer you trust, then exposing it as a network printer through
     > that computer. The photosmart D110 is the printer I had as a
     kid, and
     > I don't think it's gotten an update in a very long time.
     >
     > [1]:

https://techventures.columbia.edu/news-and-events/latest-news/symbiote-technology-created-ang-cui-and-salvatore-stolfo-named-one
     >
     >> On Jun 24, 2022, at 1:58 PM, [email protected] wrote:
     >>
     >> On 6/24/22 11:21, dan moylan wrote:
     >>
     >>> running fc36 on lenevo thinkpad T460 (alphacent), printer hp
     >>>
     >>> photosmart d110.
     >>>
     >>>
     >>> because of other problems, xfinity just came and provided a
     >>>
     >>> new modem/router/wifi.  i logged into xfinity's device and
     >>>
     >>> set up reserved ip addresses for my stuff in accordance with
     >>>
     >>> /etc/hosts:
     >>>
     >>>
     >>> 127.0.0.1       localhost.localdomain localhost
     >>>
     >>> 127.0.0.1       alphacent.localdomain  alphacent
     >>>
     >>>
     >>> 10.0.0.1         xfinity.localdomain xfinity
     >>>
     >>> 10.0.0.63        aldeberon.localdomain aldeberon
     >>>
     >>> 10.0.0.62        d110.localdomain d110
     >>>
     >>> 10.0.0.61        unknown
     >>>
     >>> 10.0.0.60        alphacent.localdomain alphacent
     >>>
     >>> 50.87.218.82     bluedan
     >>>
     >>>
     >>> all is well, except for the printer.  i went through the
     >>>
     >>> wireless setup on the printer which declared success, but
     >>>
     >>> the xfinitiy modem shows it as an offline device --
     >>>
     >>> un-pingable.
     >>>
     >>>
     >>>    moylan nmp[1111] nmap -Pn 10.0.0.62 > 3log
     >>>
     >>>
     >>>    Starting Nmap 7.92 ( https://nmap.org ) at 2022-06-24 11:14
EDT
     >>>
     >>>    Nmap scan report for d110.localdomain (10.0.0.62)
     >>>
     >>>    Host is up (0.10s latency).
     >>>
     >>>    All 1000 scanned ports on d110.localdomain (10.0.0.62) are
     >>>
     >>>    in ignored states.  Not shown: 990 filtered tcp ports
     >>>
     >>>    (no-response), 10 filtered tcp ports (host-unreach)
     >>>
     >>>
     >>>    Nmap done: 1 IP address (1 host up) scanned in 7.04 seconds
     >>>
     >>>
     >>> what's going on?
     >>>
     >>>
     >>> ole dan
     >>
     >> I swapped out my gateway with Comcast last month because of the
     speed
     >> increases back in March. My HP printer was connected to the
     previous and
     >> is connected to the new, via Ethernet. The printer apparently
     retained
     >> its IP address in its settings, so once it was connected to the
new
     >> gateway, it just worked.
     >>
     >> If the above is the IP address of the printer and HPLIP is already
     >> installed, as superuser/root, running:
     >>
     >> hp-setup -a 10.0.0.62
     >>
     >> in a terminal window, should otherwise configure it.

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