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Melancholy (Holy Martyr) |
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Hello People I will not be responsible for people misusing this information for illegal activities.
To change your dynamic IP address:XP
Try this - To change
your dynamic IP address (like those with attbi and comcast) in Windows XP (in
less than 60 seconds without additional software): take note
of your ip address beforehand to verify your changes. (if you can't figure out
how to do that, you probably shouldn't do this.) First, at
the command prompt, (start, run, command) type: ipconfig
/release (then enter, of course) you can
type EXIT at this point (just
renewing it doesn't do it) Go to
your tcp/ip properties (right click on my network places, select 'properties'
from the list) go to the
properties of the local area connection (again, right click, properties) double-click
on internet protocol tcp/ip. (you
should be at tcp/ip properties at this point. you'll be back here in less than
a minute so remember where it is.) under the
"general" tab, select the radio button that says "use the
following ip address" in the ip
address field, use a "undefined" (and thus, unused) ip address (such
as 10.1.1.1) by mouse-clicking into each field and entering the corresponding
number. below that is the gateway and by default, if you hit TAB, it will fill
with 255.0.0.0. if not, do so. click
okay, then okay again on the aforementioned local areas connections
properties. this will put you back into the network connections folder. from
here, start again, getting back to tcp/ip properties (don't remember? follow
the steps above). this time, select "obtain ip address automatically".
Click okay, then okay again. after you've verified that the address has been
changed (double click on your local area connection icon and
look at the support tab), feel free to close the network connections folder. Poof!
your ip address has changed and you can log back on to that banned game room
(or whatever). Remember,
this doesn't protect you from being tracked by those that have the resources
to do so. your network card has a unique id (MAC Address)
that your ISP has tied to each ip address you use with their service.
Hiding information:
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