Hello,
I want to join two LAN's together so that I can share resources/printers/etc. The simplest solution would be to put a router between them (or, in my case, a server 2003 box running NAT...) but they're more than 500 metre apart.
The two networks are on a college campus and there is a fibre link between the two, but getting the local network support team to let me use it is looking unlikely
So I had this idea; I put a PC with a high-gain antenna in one network, the same in the other network and then my NAT box somewhere in the middle, with another two high-gain cards in it. I could then set up an ad-hoc network and, ta-da, the networks are joined together
If anybody could answer the following, even by way of beard-stroking and sucking breath in through teeth, I'd be very grateful...
1. Would this actually work?
2. High-Gain cards are highly directional, so are they any good for receiving?
3. Would it probably be cheaper to get a pair of industrial-strength yagi antennas and join the networks with them?
4. Can anybody recommend any good, high-gain cards/antennas I can get in the UK?
Any help will be much appreciated - everybody seems to think this is a stupid idea, but I'm fairly sure it'd work...
Paul
I want to join two LAN's together so that I can share resources/printers/etc. The simplest solution would be to put a router between them (or, in my case, a server 2003 box running NAT...) but they're more than 500 metre apart.
The two networks are on a college campus and there is a fibre link between the two, but getting the local network support team to let me use it is looking unlikely
So I had this idea; I put a PC with a high-gain antenna in one network, the same in the other network and then my NAT box somewhere in the middle, with another two high-gain cards in it. I could then set up an ad-hoc network and, ta-da, the networks are joined together
If anybody could answer the following, even by way of beard-stroking and sucking breath in through teeth, I'd be very grateful...
1. Would this actually work?
2. High-Gain cards are highly directional, so are they any good for receiving?
3. Would it probably be cheaper to get a pair of industrial-strength yagi antennas and join the networks with them?
4. Can anybody recommend any good, high-gain cards/antennas I can get in the UK?
Any help will be much appreciated - everybody seems to think this is a stupid idea, but I'm fairly sure it'd work...
Paul