Unless you have a static IP setup, the IP you get comes from whatever DHCP server you connect to, usually your Router. Most Routers will give the first PC a 192.168.1.2 address.
If you connect to a Router on the moon, it will probably give you the same IP.
Unless you have a static IP setup, the IP you get comes from whatever DHCP server you connect to, usually your Router. Most Routers will give the first PC a 192.168.1.2 address.
If you connect to a Router on the moon, it will probably give you the same IP.
so its the dial-up connection that decides the ip, if so let me check the same dongle on another pc n report u back.
Are you talking about your internal IP or your external? Connecting to a router with the default gateway of 192.168.0.1 might give you an internal IP of 192.168.0.2 or any last number up to 254 but your external IP will remain the same while connected to the same ISP. A router who's gateway is 192.168.2.1, say a Belkin, will allocate you a number of 192.168.2.3 or up to 255 but again, the external is the one the ISP gives you.
Dial-up doesn't give you an internal IP because you aren't networked so you don't need one.
Does that make things any clearer - or a lot worse?
Are you talking about your internal IP or your external? Connecting to a router with the default gateway of 192.168.0.1 might give you an internal IP of 192.168.0.2 or any last number up to 254 but your external IP will remain the same while connected to the same ISP. A router who's gateway is 192.168.2.1, say a Belkin, will allocate you a number of 192.168.2.3 or up to 255 but again, the external is the one the ISP gives you.
Dial-up doesn't give you an internal IP because you aren't networked so you don't need one.
Does that make things any clearer - or a lot worse?
thanks very much bro for that info....
but if the dial up gave me an ip (xternal) than y didnt it change while switching to another one...
Also, its often seen hackers could be traced across the globe through their IPs. And, a month ago i visited a website that actually gave my home's latitude and longitude values.
These are what led me to think IPs are location based.
Pls, reply to all those observations.
Message edited by navZ88 on 02-03-2012 at 10:59:40 AM
Are you in Korea? The other two number sets wuld be useful but you gave is enough to show that is your external IP. That shouldn't change with your location but if you use an ISP such as AOL, they will probaby give you the same IP every time you log in as a way of keeping track of you. Your ISP may do the same.
Are you in Korea? The other two number sets wuld be useful but you gave is enough to show that is your external IP. That shouldn't change with your location but if you use an ISP such as AOL, they will probaby give you the same IP every time you log in as a way of keeping track of you. Your ISP may do the same.
no its india.
& the dial up connection is BSNL EVDO.
When i change the ip or the dns at : Control Panel\Network and Internet\Network Connections>Properties>Networking it demands a refresh.
When i reconnect my dongle it doesnt work, so i have to get to default settings.
I may not have made this sufficiently clear - you cannot change that external IP of 175.111.***.*** - only your ISP BSNL EVDO can control that. The IP you change in the Control Panel is by fixing an IP such as 192.168.1.44 where your Default Gateway (fixed to that router) is 192.168.1.1. That's a pointless exercise and it's better left to the DHCP system to control those internal addresses.
I may not have made this sufficiently clear - you cannot change that external IP of 175.111.***.*** - only your ISP BSNL EVDO can control that. The IP you change in the Control Panel is by fixing an IP such as 192.168.1.44 where your Default Gateway (fixed to that router) is 192.168.1.1. That's a pointless exercise and it's better left to the DHCP system to control those internal addresses.