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What kind of router do you have? Right now your router is using DHCP, you need to disable it. How to do that varies depending on what kind of router you have. My Linksys has a web control panel of sorts where all the settings are managed.
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From what I Googled, you can use DHCP for some PCs and static IPs for others. Linksys assigns IPs with DHCP only in a certain range, 100-250 or something. Try requesting a static IP on your PCs that you want static between 2 and 99, like 192.168.1.5 or something. If you search Google Groups for "linksys dhcp static" you'll get a ton of results about this.
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From the Linksys Etherfast user guide:
"1. I need to set a static IP address on a PC.
The Router, by default, assigns an IP address range of 192.168.1.100 to
192.168.1.150 using the DHCP server on the Router. To set a static IP address, you
can only use the ranges 192.168.1.2 to 192.168.1.99 and 192.168.1.151 to
192.168.1.254. Each PC or network device that uses TCP/IP must have a unique
address to identify itself in a network. If the IP address is not unique to a network,
Windows will generate an IP conflict error message."
That way you have DHCP available (it will assign IPs from the pool), and you can set a machine to use it's own static IP out of that pool.
(On a sidenote: my SMC router has an option to assign from the DHCP server a static IP to a given MAC address.)
And then there is Death
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<i>(On a sidenote: my SMC router has an option to assign from the DHCP server a static IP to a given MAC address.)</i> --Master Vivi
That would be really nice. My Linksys doesn't have that.
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