This list may not be the best forum to get a definitive response with regard to 
a specific network question like this. Instead of the condescending attitude, 
just go to the proper forum and narrow your question sufficiently.
 Work on the narrative skills and get down the the issue.
You are obviously doing something wrong and not considering something with 
regard to the configuration. I've seen similar dilemmas but it's been a while 
and network bridging can be tricky, especially with something like an A/v 
receiver where one may not have ultimate control over how it decides to 
connect. I have more experience with these situations with Windows than with 
the Mac. And , of course, it may be that there is no solution.

I admit I've read this with quite a lack of diligence and really have not 
focused on the specific issue because it seems quite like a comedy
 the way it's presented.

I'm sure there are list subscribers who have the knowledge to solve the issue 
if it indeed can be solved. What I'm getting to is your housing/office 
situation is quite irrelevant. It takes us rewriting the issue in order to 
narrow it to the point that we can even start to consider the real problem. 
Many may not have the patience and can possibly not duplicate your scenario. 
Maybe seeking a more specialized forum will help. Not that it hurts posting 
here but without all the condescension.

Not trying to be all that harsh here but you seem to be hypersensitive to the 
reactions you're getting. There's a reason why.



On Apr 26, 2015, at 5:55 PM, Christopher-Mark Gilland <clgillan...@gmail.com> 
wrote:

Jeff, that would work, but the issue is, then, the receiver only would have LAN 
access.  I need a way to get not just LAN access to the receiver, but it also 
needs to have specifically internet access, and with the way my office is 
designed architecturally speaking, there is no way I could gain internet access 
via ethernet without running cables along the ceiling, which isn't allowed.  
And please do not tell me then get another office.  I'm sorry, but the poster 
who said that was totally out of line.
 
Here's the thing.  Your suggestion is great, but correct me if I am wrong.  If 
I plug the ethernet cable from the Airport Express you suggested to the 
receiver, that would then connect the receiver via a LAN, and give it a private 
local area network IP.  But then, I'd need a way to connect the WAN port of the 
Extreme to the internet, which would mean connecting an ethernet cord from the 
modem to the extreme, right?  Well, if so, that isn't gonna happen.  The modem 
is on the same desk as my router which has to be sitting across the room from 
the receiver.  There's just no other way to do this, but to network bridge.
 
Chris.

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