This is the scenario...
Small local area network, three computers attached. Two machines are running Windows XP, the third machine is running a specialist DOS based application called XROUTER. All machines have static IP addresses in the 192.168.2.x range.
When the machines are hooked up to a Linksys router (WAG54G), all machines can PING each other. When they're connected to seemingly any other router, only the Windows machines can PING each, not the XROUTER PC.
Apart from setting the router's own IP Address to 192.168.2.1 it doesn't seem to matter how the routers are configured, or indeed not at all, the results are always the same.
Any ideas why only the Linksys will allow the DOS (XROUTER) machine to PING and be PING'd? I'm obviously missing something here...
ROGER - G0AOZ.
Small local area network, three computers attached. Two machines are running Windows XP, the third machine is running a specialist DOS based application called XROUTER. All machines have static IP addresses in the 192.168.2.x range.
When the machines are hooked up to a Linksys router (WAG54G), all machines can PING each other. When they're connected to seemingly any other router, only the Windows machines can PING each, not the XROUTER PC.
Apart from setting the router's own IP Address to 192.168.2.1 it doesn't seem to matter how the routers are configured, or indeed not at all, the results are always the same.
Any ideas why only the Linksys will allow the DOS (XROUTER) machine to PING and be PING'd? I'm obviously missing something here...
ROGER - G0AOZ.