Not always true, I had the issue when I tested the line with a direct
network connection to the cox cable modem. I saw it was working,
getting dhcp just fine, and I was able to get a web page without a
problem. I then unplugged everything, rearranged wires to not be so
ugly and balled up like they were, plugged the cable modem in and
watched it initialize and sync with cox. I plugged my Belkin wireless
router into it (yes, into the right port :) ) and once I got a dhcp
address internally on my laptop, I got a cox page everytime I went
somewhere, saying to contact customer service. Needless to say, when
I called tech support, they were very terse and told me they don't
support anything other than a single computer connected to their
network. When they blanked the mac on their end and they told me to
"hook the computer up the right way", I took a funky little laptop
that barely booted and used that for the initial MAC sequencing. Once
we disconnected, I cloned that MAC onto the wireless router as the
internet mac, and threw the laptop away. No problem since.
--Dan
On Wed, May 14, 2008 at 8:37 PM, Jon M. Hanson <
jon@the-hansons-az.net> wrote:
> You don't have to call Cox if your MAC address has changed. You just have to
> unplug the cable modem's power for a minute or so and plug it back in.
> ---
> Jon M. Hanson (N7ZVJ)
> Weblog: http://the-hansons-az.net/wordpress/
> Homepage: http://the-hansons-az.net/
> Jabber IM: jon@the-hansons-az.net
>
>
--
Thanks,
Dan Lund
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