The new DHCP does not need to know the addresses that were given out by the old DHCP, unless they are reservations.
If the addresses are fixed in accordance to the MAC addresses of the clients, then you need to set them in the new device.
If they are not fixed, then the clients will simply ask...
Personally, i think going from Desktop support to networking is a tough sell. If i were you, i would get my MCSE and go into system administration. It's the next logical step for you. Once there, learn about the other operating systems out there (Unix, Linux, AS400, etc) After a couple of...
boot: cannot load "flash:n"
This is your problem i think. Is "n" the name of your IOS file? If not, you need to change your boot command to reflect the correct name of your file.
Could be that Watchguard received information from MailMarshal that your customer's domain has produced or distributed spam or use to spread a virus before and has been blacklisted.
I've personally never use any of these products, so, i'm just guessing here. Have you contacted either...
It all depends on your network setup.
If both your PCs are on the same LAN and are configured at 1G speed, they will use the full speed of their connection.
On the other hand, if they are not on the same network and they need to go through your router to talk to each other, then the transfer...
Without much information to go on, i see one possibility;
The two buildings DNS do not share the information between the two.
If the servers, whether they use the same domain names or not, don't share their information, one will not be aware of the other and its data. You could copy manually...
Have your DNS administrator (supplier) reduce your time to live values all your DNS records to their minimum a few days before the move, this will shorten the transition period.
Can you do a traceroute from your workstation that is on the VPN? it will tell you where the packets are being dropped.
What exactly is your message when you ping?
As far as having an IP with a /32 mask, it needs to do that i figure because it needs to set a route saying that to reach your PC...
Are you using proxies in your company?
I doubt very much that DNS would be doing this. I figure your browser is configured to go to your default website if it cannot find the correct website.
No idea what root hints could be, never heard of that before.
What is your DNS application? Bind? Windows? other?
In most cases, you will need to create a zone called 11.0.10.in-addr.arpa and put all of your IPs in there (the IPs from your forward lookup zone).
From what i can tell, your TCP Stack is not installed
From the Control panel/system, can you at least see your network card?
If so, go to add software, select windows software and try to located and install the TCP/IP Stack.
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