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My computer won't show websites despite having an IP address.

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dragonfly1977

Technical User
Apr 7, 2007
1
GB
My broadband connection is supplied by Virgin (formerly ntl), in Nottingham, UK. The box outside my house originally had one live connection delivered by coaxial cable. This supplied the house with broadband and digital tv. I can verify that the broadband works (I have not yet been able to verify the tv).

Two other cables going into my house were cut before I bought the place. I added a 4-way F splitter (QQ70M) and fitted CT100 connectors to the cut cables so that I can have two more live modems in the house. Theoretically, all three should be live. I checked the original connection and it is still live.

However, I tested one of the other 'newly live' cables with a different modem. My second computer tested the connection and confirmed that it was connected and gave me a different IP address from the other cabled computer but when I opened a browser to use the internet, it did not find any server or websites.

In other words, two computers, two modems, two IP addresses but only one is accessing web content.

Does anybody have an answer to this riddle?
 
you can only have one modem , for more computers you put a router behind that one modem then connect as many box's as you like (up to 253).

 
Providers of cable modem service will only recognize one MAC address per account. Do what Skip555 says and get a Linksys router. The router's MAC address will be the one the cable company sees, yet it will share the connection on the LAN behind it.
 
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