Michael
January 10th 04, 12:28 AM
I have two machines with XP/home that I have connected directly with a =
crossover Ethernet cable. I have successfully brought up file sharing, =
printer sharing, and ICS. My internet connection from my ICS host is a =
dial-up.
What I'm missing is the "Internet Gateway" control that I have read =
about for the ICS client, so that I may connect/disconnect to the =
Internet from the client.
If I set the ICS host to "allow other computers to connect..." then I =
can connect from the client, but I have the "sorcerer's apprentice" =
scenario--even with no foreground applications running, my client wants =
to constantly dial the internet on the host. So I turned that option =
off.
I configured my ICS client using the network setup wizard, and according =
to my reading, there should have been an "internet gateway", but I don't =
have one. (Perhaps with XP/pro only...??)
If I cannot get a connect/disconnect control on my client, I'd settle =
for having it auto-connect but only when I run a foreground application =
that requests it.
Any thoughts would be appreciated.
crossover Ethernet cable. I have successfully brought up file sharing, =
printer sharing, and ICS. My internet connection from my ICS host is a =
dial-up.
What I'm missing is the "Internet Gateway" control that I have read =
about for the ICS client, so that I may connect/disconnect to the =
Internet from the client.
If I set the ICS host to "allow other computers to connect..." then I =
can connect from the client, but I have the "sorcerer's apprentice" =
scenario--even with no foreground applications running, my client wants =
to constantly dial the internet on the host. So I turned that option =
off.
I configured my ICS client using the network setup wizard, and according =
to my reading, there should have been an "internet gateway", but I don't =
have one. (Perhaps with XP/pro only...??)
If I cannot get a connect/disconnect control on my client, I'd settle =
for having it auto-connect but only when I run a foreground application =
that requests it.
Any thoughts would be appreciated.