telnet
TCP/IP. It is the most commonly used protocol in the world.
RIP
After checking with its Routing Table (table creation depends on Routing Protocol).
click start control panel network connections right click in local area connection click propreties select tcp/ip select install it all....
A router.
A protocol that lets one device on a local network, known as a DHCP server, assign temporary IP addresses to the other network devices
If you want to assign the IP addresses manually then u select static IP and put them in. IF you want to make it easier and have the router do it for you, then select DHCP Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol. It will assign the IP's usually starting from an internal C class scheme, ex. 100.1.x.x hope that helps, any questions im the IT guru at thejyst@gmail.com
Go to your network connection and select your local network - properties, Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) - prperties. Select "Use the following DNS server addresses" and enter the desired DNS server.
Press Win+Pause, then Remote, then choose Allow users to connect remotely, then Select Remote Users, Add the user which you are going to use to connect to your PC. Usually it's that login which you use to log in locally. If you are using Windows firewall if you have to choose Remote Desktop from Exception list to allow connection to your PC through Remote Desktop Protocol. wasijshdhs
make sure that you have a router and that you are in range... make sure your ipod is detecting your network... go to settings/wifi and select your network
First, routing is the process a router performs when making forwarding decisions for each packet arriving at the gateway interface. To forward a packet to a destination network, the router requires a route to that network. If a route to a destination network does not exist on the router, the packet will be forwarded to the default gateway. Now, the destination network can be a number of routers or hops away from the default gateway. If the router has an entry for the network in its routing table, it would only indicate the next-hop router to which the packet is to be forwarded to and not the exact route to the final router. To sum it up, the routing process uses a routing table to map the destination address to the next hop and then forwards the packet to the next-hop address.
I know how to get internet on your psp, it took me really long but now ive figured it out. first you will need a router, that's the only way i know. Then, on your psp, you scroll down to the network settings under settings, then you press X. Then you select infrastructure mode. select new connection then select scan. Before you choose an access point, look under your router, it should say the SSID name and NETWORK KEY. check your SSID name on ur router, the name should show up on your psp. This should be the strongest connection so select it. After you select ur connection, press the X button again. Check under ur router for the network key then type it in, when you've done that, keep on pressing the X button till it says TEST CONNECTION. your psp should be right in front of your router.