Ack!  Thanks for the answers.  I have one more question that I was wondering if
you could help with:  Is there anyway to track down a device that I can only
detect by ethernet mac address on a non-routed, non-switched network?  I have a
couple of odd addresses floating around the inside of our network that I can't
account for and I was hoping to at least see what they were.  We have DHCP/bootp
running on an NT server and it does a great job, but apparently these ethernet
addresses aren't requesting ip's.  Thanks again!
Britt
"Menelaos N. Karamichalis" wrote:
> On Mon, 15 Feb 1999, Britton Johnson wrote:
>
> > Hello!  I had a couple quick questions.  A) I wanted to ask if you had
> > any updates on what ram I need for my cisco router (I understand if you
> > forgot, believe me).
> No, I did not forget, we are working on that one...
>
> > B) Does the IP 204.162.80.140 mean anything to you?  Is that our local
> > router?  On the network monitor it is behaving like it might be and it
> > claims to be a cisco product.  I was just under the impression that our
> > routers IP was 199.217.137.65 and/or 199.217.200.254.  Thanks in
> > advance.
>
> menelaos@admin> nslookup 204.162.80.140
> Server:  localhost.starnet.net
> Address:  127.0.0.1
>
> Name:    dl2.download.com
> Address:  204.162.80.140
>
> This seems to be a server for download.com, a download server where you
> can get software for Macs, PCs, etc.  199.217.137.65 is the Ethernet
> address of your router, the serial interface's IP address is
> 199.217.250.18.  I do not know for sure what 199.217.200.254 is, probably
> an address that is not being used.
>
> > Britt
>
> Menelaos N. Karamichalis        mnk@verio.net           (314)-429-4555 x 1005
>         A home with no books is like a house with no windows
Received on Tue Feb 16 1999 - 12:51:07 MST
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