I believe P2P falls under the category of piracy here and is therefore not allowed here.
I believe P2P falls under the category of piracy here and is therefore not allowed here.
Abandon all hope.
I gotta strongly object here. P2P is not illegal. There are thousands of examples of legitimate usage of it out there, some of the more common ones are used by Valve (Steam), Blizzard (WoW), Direct2Drive, and most major Linux distributions are available now via P2P. That said, it's no big secret that P2P is also one of the larger methods used for illicit activities, but it's blatantly untrue that the "majority" of it is for that purpose, however organizations such as the RIAA or MPAA would want you to believe just that.
As long as the essence of our guidelines is kept being given attention to, there's nothing wrong. However the very first moment P2P discussion goes "astray", we can't allow it to continue, folks.
Quirinus, Whacker has made a comprehensive guide to address your issue and solve it. If you still need things to get cleared up, however, with your router's brand and model no. in hand, point your browser to Portforward.com 's Guides section. There, in the left side of the page you'll have the most basic topics such as how to get yourself a static IP (essential for port mapping/forwarding) and a router by router guide to get your ports forwarded so that your programs will be working to their fullest.
Hope that helps.
Thanks Whacker, LeftNineEye.
I did stumble upon PortForward.com while digging around P2P support forums. It does seem amazingly comprehensive and idiot-proof for the most part-- I've even been able to make my IP static, buuut (and apologies for such a basic question) I have no idea how to find out what my router is. I think I know my router is a Billion one, but which one I have no idea. =( (I'm using a laptop btw, so I think my router is built in.)
WARNING! This baseline signature should never appear on screen!
Oh well, routers can't be built in as far as I know. Something is a router because it can route a connection among several clients through itself. So a built-in router on a laptop doesn't make sense. I'd need to be corrected if I'm ay behind latest laptop technology, though.
How do you access internet, Quirinus? Wireless? Ethernet LAN ? USB LAN ?
Uh, and also..
How did you manage to do this ?Thanks Whacker, LeftNineEye![]()
Ahhh, I see. Looked around, there's a thing calling itself an ADSL router. I connect to the Internet using a LAN cable, which runs from my laptop to said "ADSL router".
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
Uh, and also..
How did you manage to do this ?![]()
Apologies, LeftEyeNine.....
WARNING! This baseline signature should never appear on screen!
So that's it. That's the router we're talking about and the one you need to look up in PortForward.com 's router-by-router guide list.
Get yourself a spare flesh just in case you repeat that foul of yours.Apologies, LeftEyeNine.....
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Last edited by LeftEyeNine; 11-13-2008 at 15:22.
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