RE: Route IP subnet?
February 18, 2016 at 10:03 pm
(This post was last modified: February 18, 2016 at 10:42 pm by ignoramus.)
Matey. Pretty sure any router can do what you need.
Just pay the 35 bucks per year with dyndns and you didn't really need to worry about fixed ip's.
But you now have them. That's good.
Are you sure you're not confusing your internal private ip's with the public?
Tell us more.
Eg: most ISP's give dynamic IP addresses. Because I like to login to my cameras at home from my phone anytime, it used to be a pain updating the new IP every time. Hence why dyndns fixes all that.
Whether it's a DVR or webserver or game ports, it doesn't really matter. Nearly every router in the last 5 years has the smarts to do all the proper routing and security for you. It's their job, that's all they do.
Just to confirm, you're not doing anything funky like trying to combine 2 different wans or anything, are you?
Just pay the 35 bucks per year with dyndns and you didn't really need to worry about fixed ip's.
But you now have them. That's good.
Are you sure you're not confusing your internal private ip's with the public?
Tell us more.
Eg: most ISP's give dynamic IP addresses. Because I like to login to my cameras at home from my phone anytime, it used to be a pain updating the new IP every time. Hence why dyndns fixes all that.
Whether it's a DVR or webserver or game ports, it doesn't really matter. Nearly every router in the last 5 years has the smarts to do all the proper routing and security for you. It's their job, that's all they do.
Just to confirm, you're not doing anything funky like trying to combine 2 different wans or anything, are you?
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