Extra charge for 2 PCs on an AT&T broadband connection?

I am in the process of setting up a 2-system home-based LAN around a MAC G4 and WinME PC via a LinkSys Router (BEFSR41 v. 2). Two questions: 1) AT&T says there is an extra $4. 95/mo charge for two PCs on one connection.

Windows Hardware 9627 This topic was started by ,


data/avatar/default/avatar27.webp

199 Posts
Location -
Joined 2001-03-30
I am in the process of setting up a 2-system home-based LAN around a MAC G4 and WinME PC via a LinkSys Router (BEFSR41 v. 2). Two questions:
 
1) AT&T says there is an extra $4.95/mo charge for two PCs on one connection. I have friends in another part of the Midwest connecting 2 PCs to AT&T Broadband via the router mentioned above, who are not charged the extra fee. What's up?
 
2) Should I anticpate any configuration problems connecting a PC and MAC through the router?
 
SnapperOne

Participate on our website and join the conversation

You have already an account on our website? Use the link below to login.
Login
Create a new user account. Registration is free and takes only a few seconds.
Register
This topic is archived. New comments cannot be posted and votes cannot be cast.

Responses to this topic


data/avatar/default/avatar27.webp

1117 Posts
Location -
Joined 2000-01-23
1) The extra fee is for an extra IP address. Since you are using a router, you only need one IP address, and AT&T has no way of telling how many PC's you have hiding behind that router.
 
2) Nope - as long as the router is set up as a DHCP server (which they usually are), both the Mac and the PC should pick up IP's and get out on the internet just fine. Now if you want to start sharing files between them, well, that may be a whole other issue.

data/avatar/default/avatar19.webp

1 Posts
Location -
Joined 2003-01-03
you will also need to clone the MAC address of the computer that you regestered the account with. In the linksys routers its under one of the advanced tabs i believe

data/avatar/default/avatar27.webp

1117 Posts
Location -
Joined 2000-01-23
Quote:you will also need to clone the MAC address of the computer that you regestered the account with. In the linksys routers its under one of the advanced tabs i believe
Not necessarily... In my area at least, AT&T controls access by machine name, not MAC address. I've changed network cards several times (which changes the MAC address), and not had any trouble. But I have to have the machine name to get on, which is something like "a1234567-b" (that's not mine of course). When going through the router, you would now set the linksys to use that hostname rather than your computer.

Oh, and just to make sure there's no confusion for the less network savvy people among us: MAC address refers to the unique address of any network device. MAC here stands for Media Access Control, and has nothing to do with Macintosh computers...

data/avatar/default/avatar35.webp

2172 Posts
Location -
Joined 2002-08-26
Charter Communications in NC only require the MAC address of the cable modem, supposedly, if you take the modem to another physical line (still serviced by Charter's network) you can get internet access, as that modem's MAC is registered in some authentication database.

data/avatar/default/avatar27.webp

1117 Posts
Location -
Joined 2000-01-23
;( Like I said, it must depend on the area, because AT&T in my area doesn't require the MAC address, only the hostname.

data/avatar/default/avatar22.webp

1438 Posts
Location -
Joined 2001-01-04
put a second nic in your PC computer and use ICS - then both go through the same NIC / MAC adress
 
and then also no issues with file sharing.
 
but good luck sending files form msn and such on the internal computer unless u use 3rd party software to NAT.