Why do I have to map a static IP to my wireless MAC, to connect to the Internet, but only from my house?
I am able to connect from other wireless networks (corporate networks, hotels, etc.), but when I connect at home, I can't connect to the Internet (although "ipconfig /all" seems to show everything properly configured). I finally added a static IP (the same IP assigned dynamically) and I was able to connect to the Internet.
I don't have to map a static IP to connect to the Internet over the wired, ethernet adapter. A dynamically assigned IP works just fine that way.
I'm using an Asus RT-AC3100 router with MAC filtering turned on. DHCP server works if I connect via wired ethernet connection.
I'm about to throw away windows and load Fedora or Red Hat my laptop. and thought I'd see if I could get this resolved, first.
I am able to connect from other wireless networks (corporate networks, hotels, etc.), but when I connect at home, I can't connect to the Internet (although "ipconfig /all" seems to show everything properly configured). I finally added a static IP (the same IP assigned dynamically) and I was able to connect to the Internet.
I don't have to map a static IP to connect to the Internet over the wired, ethernet adapter. A dynamically assigned IP works just fine that way.
I'm using an Asus RT-AC3100 router with MAC filtering turned on. DHCP server works if I connect via wired ethernet connection.
I'm about to throw away windows and load Fedora or Red Hat my laptop. and thought I'd see if I could get this resolved, first.