I am using xiomi redmi note. In my phone manager software I have option to share internet from pc.
My question is if I share my PC internet to android phone through usb, what will be the IP address
assigned to the phone? How can I find it? In my company my PC is assigned to static IP, so if both my PC
and mobile uses same ip , then IP conflict will come. I don't want to show my identity. Will my company network administrator able to
find that I am sharing office internet to my mobile.? Will they able to find which computer in network is sharing internet with mobile?
Related
I access internet via Internet sharing with my Polaris USB connection
I found my notebook would get a NAT ip (192.168.xxxx)
How can I do to get a real IP?
http://www.whatismyip.org/
I mean I want my notebook to get the real IP not NAT
your laptop have 1 ip for each nic wifi and wired and firewire and bluetooth nic
connected and then it have the loopback adaptor
in a console on your laptop you can type ipconfig and have them listed
Sorry my poor English
All I need is to access my notebook's web site by my friends
so I want a real IP to tell my friend
I can browse other web site by using Internet sharing
but my friend can not browse my web site if I use my Polaris to the Internet
I found there was some HTC USB modem driver to use.
but it seems no use on the Polaris
You have a web-server active on your notebook and it is connected in lan at your home, and you want to view this website from internet when you are in your friend's home: it's right?
If I've understand, you must point at the public IP address of your home's internet access (you can find it in site like http://www.whatismyip.org/), but before this, you must forward the port 80 in your router to the private address of your notebook.
Hoping that he was quite clear...
P.S.: Also my English is not the greatest ...
caliu said:
I access internet via Internet sharing with my Polaris USB connection
I found my notebook would get a NAT ip (192.168.xxxx)
How can I do to get a real IP?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It was my understanding that with Internet Sharing on WM6, clients are placed into a DMZ and all incoming connections will go to the client.
That means that your web / ftp / etc server should work fine.
However, if your mobile provider makes you use a proxy to access the internet, then incoming connections are not possible.
I'm going to bet that this is what is happening to you, and there is nothing you can do to solve this problem.
Hello,
I installed debian on the JF 1.5 I'm running on my phone, then I installed (in Debian, of course) OpenSSH Server.
Now, when the phone is connected to my LAN via Wifi, I can SSH it to its IP address even from my PC, and login to Debian... like to a real computer
I'd like to open inbound connections to port 22 on Android, to allow me connect with SSH also when it's on 3G network, using the IP that was assigned by mobile carrier. How I can do it?
Thanks in advance!
I don't think open port on phone do anything.
the blocking is on your operator network. they have firewall too.
Maybe my operator doesn't? I'm using Tre (Italy). What I can do to test it?
Up Up, please
but most mobile operators use private address + proxy scheme. how could you bypass that? (even if the client is also in the same mobile network, your carrier is very likely to implement subnet isolation for security reasons.)
I am trying to connect my HTC 3G Phone to my laptop.
I changed the port number for Remote Desktop by using regedit and change the port number in RDP-Tcp.
I have changed the port number to 5000.
I rebooted the computer.
When I try the setting on my PDA and I am on my home network, I use the computer name (HyderpotterAcer:5000) I get can not connect message.
Which IP address Do you put ie IP address to the home wifi router or the ip address to the computer?
Thanks
Mark
I did a ping from my PDA to the laptop and that worked.
if you're behind a router you can't give the IP of the computer as it's a LAN IP. open the port on your router forwarded to the specific computer IP you want to connect to and try again.
It does not work and I think I did port Forwarding right.
I'd like to be able to deploy a lightweight web server on my mobile device (android 2.1) but there are obviously NAT issues with respect to the mobile provider's network. Is there anyway I can make my device publicly available/addressable over the internet?
Thanks
as far as i know you cant, the service provider will assign each device a private address, it can only go online through their own NAT services, the phone will connect to any GSM Service providers signal distributors.
the only public IP available would be the Signal Distributors, and I doubt very highly your service provider would go through the trouble of assigning your phone a static private IP and then Port forwarding to your phone.
you can do this over WIFI without trouble you just need webservices running on the phone.
as far as i know there is no direct way of connecting to your mobile phone using a public IP Address
hello,
i downloaded the app IP-Webcam that stream your camera live to your PC or any other device.
every time a start the server, with or without WIFI, my IP start with 10 (10.*.*.*:8080)
so i can only connect via same network, what means that if i start the server using mobile internet i can't connect at all..
in all the youtube videos about the app i see that the IP start with 192 (192.*.*.*:8080)
so they can connect via mobile internet.
how can i ma ke my IP to start with 192 ??
alontraitel said:
hello,
i downloaded the app IP-Webcam that stream your camera live to your PC or any other device.
every time a start the server, with or without WIFI, my IP start with 10 (10.*.*.*:8080)
so i can only connect via same network, what means that if i start the server using mobile internet i can't connect at all..
in all the youtube videos about the app i see that the IP start with 192 (192.*.*.*:8080)
so they can connect via mobile internet.
how can i ma ke my IP to start with 192 ??
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'd suggest that you go away and do some reading on the Internet (try using Google) about what an IP address is and how it relates to your device, network and everything else. Life is too short for me to try and explain all that to you.
Simply, however, the IP address must match your network.
SimonTS said:
I'd suggest that you go away and do some reading on the Internet (try using Google) about what an IP address is and how it relates to your device, network and everything else. Life is too short for me to try and explain all that to you.
Simply, however, the IP address must match your network.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok... i know now that 192 and 10 are local IP's
so i change my question:
how can i connect to this webcam via a long distance computer??
like i run the server in my house and my friend from the other side of the city connect to it ?
alontraitel said:
ok... i know now that 192 and 10 are local IP's
so i change my question:
how can i connect to this webcam via a long distance computer??
like i run the server in my house and my friend from the other side of the city connect to it ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Now you need to read up on TCP and UDP ports, find out which ports the webcam application uses and either set up a VPN to your network, or allow those ports through your Router/Firewall so other people can access the camera remotely.
SimonTS said:
Now you need to read up on TCP and UDP ports, find out which ports the webcam application uses and either set up a VPN to your network, or allow those ports through your Router/Firewall so other people can access the camera remotely.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
ok i open the port 8080 to TCP/UDP
how can i set an VPN? hamachi will work?
if it will work? what IP i need to give to my friends ?
alontraitel said:
ok i open the port 8080 to TCP/UDP
how can i set an VPN? hamachi will work?
if it will work? what IP i need to give to my friends ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Setting up a VPN depends on what Router/Firewall etc you have, so I can't tell you. The IP you would need to give would by your External Internet address (the one your Router's WAN port uses) and you would need to either use NAT or Port-Forwarding to get the incoming packets to the IP Address of your phone.
Hamachi will not be any use as it doesn't have an Android client to run on your phone.