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Network magic 4.9.8225
Network magic 4.9.8225





In an industry of remarkable change, Network Magic has been headquartered in West Los Angeles since 1987. We’ve partnered with HP, Cisco Systems, Juniper Networks, Microsoft, Symantec, and other vendors to provide best network solutions for our clients. Not solved, but not a fatal problem, either.Founded Network Magic Unlimited to meet rapidly growing demands for desktop workstations to connect first to midrange systems-then to create and maintain secure, stable and user-friendly networks and infrastructure for businesses. I think we can give up on this since I don't think you will be able to get the total picture without having an example of the hardware (NetGear wireless printserver) to mess with. Everything works except I can't administer the network camera connected there via its local ip address. My only real "problem" is how Network Magic fails to properly map devices connected to the NetGear printeserver's ethernet switch ports. When I connect with the same machine to the router wirelessly the ipconfig shows the wireless adapter active and not the wired one. I did that and it worked fine and I posted the ipconfig for that. You asked to see what would happen if I connected a computer to the NetGear wireless printesrver's ethernet ports using the device like a wireless bridge. I have no problem connecting to the router wirelessly with either of my noteboks. : 00-1B-77-4C-37-A0Ĭlick to expand.Whoa, John, you must be flashing to some other problem. : Sunday, Janu9:01:53 AMĮthernet adapter Wireless Network Connection: Looks good to my relatively untrained eyes.Ĭ:\Documents and Settings\Ray>ipconfig/all It looks the same as the run I made when it was online wirelessly except for the wired ethernet adapter is active instead of the wireless adapter.

network magic 4.9.8225

Here is the ipconfig for the Sony notebook connected by ethernet cable to the switch on the NetGear printserver. For some reason Network Magic is confused about the nature and status of devices connected to the printserver swich, even though they continute to work properly. But when I disconnected the Sony those other devices (net printer, camera server) went "offline" in the Network Magic map, but still continue to function properly. and the other devices connected to the NetGear switch showed up as well, but they weren't all labelled precisely. It indeed joined the network and was fully functional with network and internet connectivity. I turned off the wireless on my Sony SZ notebook and connected it to the switch on the NetGear printserver. I guess I don't understand why connecting a device, with it's own unique IO address, to the ethernet switch on the printserver would get confused with the printserver itself? I can't seem to have both devices on the network map. If I then unplug the camera and reconnect it to the router it reverts to as above with both devices mapped properly to their respective IP addresses, except that all the device information for the printserver stays as it was for the camera except that the reported IP address changes back to the printserver interface and it takes me to the printserver interface as it should. Then I plug the D-Link DCS-950 into the printserver's onboard 4-port switch and Network Magic deletes the "Network Printer" device and adds a device reported as "Camera Server" and its IP address indeed takes me to the camera's web interface.

network magic 4.9.8225

Network Magic reports the device as "Network Printer" and the IP address indeed is that for the printserver web interface. but ONLY when I plug it into the ethernet switch on the NetGear wireless printserver. One netcam (Axis 207W - wireless) is set to static IP of 141.

network magic 4.9.8225

All clients except for the 2 network cameras and the NetGear wireless printserver are set to DHCP, and the router starting DHCP is 100 with a max number of users set to 50. Re: mapping network devices - Network Magic







Network magic 4.9.8225