Sites similar to nslookup to bypass server blocks?
Q. My school uses a system to block the viewing of websites like Myspace. Normally I can use something like nslookup to find the IP Address of the site I want and bypass the block, but it doesn't always work. Does anyone know websites like nslookup that wil allow me to bypass the server block?
Asked by REDSOX847 - Thu Nov 2 11:10:59 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. No...you crapnugget! Pay attention...those are my taxdollars B!
Answered by Andrew B. - Thu Nov 2 11:19:10 2006
Q. My school uses a system to block the viewing of websites like Myspace. Normally I can use something like nslookup to find the IP Address of the site I want and bypass the block, but it doesn't always work. Does anyone know websites like nslookup that wil allow me to bypass the server block?
Asked by REDSOX847 - Thu Nov 2 11:10:59 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. No...you crapnugget! Pay attention...those are my taxdollars B!
Answered by Andrew B. - Thu Nov 2 11:19:10 2006
Help with IT class using nslookup/dig on linux?
Q. 2. Run nslookup to determine the authoritative DNS servers for a university in Europe. 3. Run nslookup so that one of the DNS servers obtained in Question 2 is queried for the mail servers for Yahoo! mail. Do you know the commands?
Asked by Brittany - Fri Sep 14 12:30:47 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. use a book, and how you think you pass the class anf get a job if you won't learn.
Answered by steven25t - Fri Sep 14 12:39:32 2007
Q. 2. Run nslookup to determine the authoritative DNS servers for a university in Europe. 3. Run nslookup so that one of the DNS servers obtained in Question 2 is queried for the mail servers for Yahoo! mail. Do you know the commands?
Asked by Brittany - Fri Sep 14 12:30:47 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. use a book, and how you think you pass the class anf get a job if you won't learn.
Answered by steven25t - Fri Sep 14 12:39:32 2007
how can i create nslookup function using my own web page?this function must be setup in a small network group?
Q. i've using wampserver as my server based..
Asked by abc - Sat Jan 26 09:35:18 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. at the first u should have a dynamic website (like php asp ..) then u need to call funcs to request that: these funcs are in PHP u can find equivalent in other PL's string gethostbyaddr ( string $ip_address ) string gethostbyname ( string $hostname )
Answered by f14f21 - Sat Jan 26 10:03:00 2008
Q. i've using wampserver as my server based..
Asked by abc - Sat Jan 26 09:35:18 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. at the first u should have a dynamic website (like php asp ..) then u need to call funcs to request that: these funcs are in PHP u can find equivalent in other PL's string gethostbyaddr ( string $ip_address ) string gethostbyname ( string $hostname )
Answered by f14f21 - Sat Jan 26 10:03:00 2008
Find how to use the NSlookup utility in windows, and find the address of come commercial web servers.?
Q. Find how to use the NSlookup utility in windows, and find the address of come commercial web servers.?
Asked by toni s - Wed Oct 25 18:51:36 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Click Start, click run, type nslookup, and then simply type things like www.yahoo.com and it will show you the IP of the site. Type help under the prompt, and you will be shown a list of possible commands.
Answered by muon - Wed Oct 25 19:26:50 2006
Q. Find how to use the NSlookup utility in windows, and find the address of come commercial web servers.?
Asked by toni s - Wed Oct 25 18:51:36 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Click Start, click run, type nslookup, and then simply type things like www.yahoo.com and it will show you the IP of the site. Type help under the prompt, and you will be shown a list of possible commands.
Answered by muon - Wed Oct 25 19:26:50 2006
Find how to use the nslookup utility in windows, and find the address of come commercial web servers.?
Q. Find how to use the nslookup utility in windows, and find the address of come commercial web servers.?
Asked by toni s - Wed Oct 25 17:26:46 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Not very sure if I understood your question properly. I will try to answer the question as I understood it. Click the START button on your computer, click on RUN (alternatively hold the Windows key on your computer and press R) type in CMD. Once in the MS DOS windows type in nslookup followed by either the URL or IP i.e. nslookup www.yahoo.com nslookup 209.131.36.158 either one will get you the same information. If you are unsure if it's a commercial site you can always look at to verify some information, though it is always not present.
Answered by Cesar - Wed Oct 25 17:37:15 2006
Q. Find how to use the nslookup utility in windows, and find the address of come commercial web servers.?
Asked by toni s - Wed Oct 25 17:26:46 2006 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Not very sure if I understood your question properly. I will try to answer the question as I understood it. Click the START button on your computer, click on RUN (alternatively hold the Windows key on your computer and press R) type in CMD. Once in the MS DOS windows type in nslookup followed by either the URL or IP i.e. nslookup www.yahoo.com nslookup 209.131.36.158 either one will get you the same information. If you are unsure if it's a commercial site you can always look at to verify some information, though it is always not present.
Answered by Cesar - Wed Oct 25 17:37:15 2006
nslookup backend services?
Q. what is nslookup and how it work when you enter in a command prompt nslookup what process execute in a backend services
Asked by M Nauman - Wed Feb 3 00:39:15 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. what is nslookup and how it work when you enter in a command prompt nslookup what process execute in a backend services
Asked by M Nauman - Wed Feb 3 00:39:15 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
give a brief description of IPCONFIG, TRACERT, NSLOOKUP, PING troubleshooting tools and their usage.?
Q. give a brief description of IPCONFIG, TRACERT, NSLOOKUP, PING troubleshooting tools and their usage.?
Asked by Mahfazur R - Mon Jun 9 18:20:46 2008 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments
A. hopefully you're not doing any course that will result in you being in charge of a computer if you can't use a search engine:
Answered by piquet - Mon Jun 9 18:32:34 2008
Q. give a brief description of IPCONFIG, TRACERT, NSLOOKUP, PING troubleshooting tools and their usage.?
Asked by Mahfazur R - Mon Jun 9 18:20:46 2008 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments
A. hopefully you're not doing any course that will result in you being in charge of a computer if you can't use a search engine:
Answered by piquet - Mon Jun 9 18:32:34 2008
difference between pinging or nslookup for www.yahoo.come and yahoo.com ....?
Q. why is pinging or nslookup for www.yahoo.come gives different results than pinging or nslookup for yahoo.com (without www) ???
Asked by alien0n05 - Wed Sep 20 13:34:33 2006 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments
A. Google does it too. It's called Load Balancing.
Answered by Reggaematic - Wed Sep 20 13:44:38 2006
Q. why is pinging or nslookup for www.yahoo.come gives different results than pinging or nslookup for yahoo.com (without www) ???
Asked by alien0n05 - Wed Sep 20 13:34:33 2006 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments
A. Google does it too. It's called Load Balancing.
Answered by Reggaematic - Wed Sep 20 13:44:38 2006
what nslookup use for?
Q. i know nslookup is use to lookup dns infomation,but why and when we have to do this? ...
Asked by loon5131_my - Thu Jan 18 12:12:14 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Under normal circumstances you don't, but sometimes you might need to identify who really owns a web page or find the IP address corresponding to a URL.
Answered by Fix My PC Mike - Thu Jan 18 12:24:22 2007
Q. i know nslookup is use to lookup dns infomation,but why and when we have to do this? ...
Asked by loon5131_my - Thu Jan 18 12:12:14 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Under normal circumstances you don't, but sometimes you might need to identify who really owns a web page or find the IP address corresponding to a URL.
Answered by Fix My PC Mike - Thu Jan 18 12:24:22 2007
nslookup will give Ip adress from DNS name .But how to get DNS name from IP adress?
Q. nslookup will give Ip adress from DNS name .But how to get DNS name from IP adress?
Asked by vishaldsh - Wed May 10 01:55:00 2006 - - 6 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Pinging the DNS Name from a simple DOS prompt would generally resolve the DNS name and show it as well. If it does not, you could try using the -a option of the ping command to force resolving domain names. Try: ping -a XX.XX.XX.XX where XX.XX.XX.XX is the IP address you have. It is also possible that a public IP address may not have a domain name registered with it. So dont be surprised if you do not get a domain name response.
Answered by Dhruv - Wed May 10 02:24:58 2006
Q. nslookup will give Ip adress from DNS name .But how to get DNS name from IP adress?
Asked by vishaldsh - Wed May 10 01:55:00 2006 - - 6 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Pinging the DNS Name from a simple DOS prompt would generally resolve the DNS name and show it as well. If it does not, you could try using the -a option of the ping command to force resolving domain names. Try: ping -a XX.XX.XX.XX where XX.XX.XX.XX is the IP address you have. It is also possible that a public IP address may not have a domain name registered with it. So dont be surprised if you do not get a domain name response.
Answered by Dhruv - Wed May 10 02:24:58 2006
Browsers not working/Ping command and Nslookup not working/But connected to internet?
Q. I'm using a wireless connection and it says I'm connected -- it was working perfectly earlier, and all of a sudden, all my browsers stopped working. It all started happening this week. I've been using google chrome since I was able to install it without admin rights (I don't have admin priveleges on this computer) but one day that stopped working (I was connected to the internet but nothing would open on chrome), so I settled for internet explorer. Today I managed to install Opera without admin rights and that worked beautifully for a while. After an hour or so, it stopped working. I checked Internet Explorer - that stopped working too. I looked up ways to check my internet connection - it says I'm connected, but the ping command doesn' [cont.]
Asked by happpenstance - Fri Feb 26 23:45:15 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. It sounds to me like your wireless connection to the router is good, but the router's connection to the internet is down. You need to login to your router and check its status. Verify that it has a connection to your ISP and that it has a valid ip address.
Answered by Rute - Sat Feb 27 00:44:19 2010
Q. I'm using a wireless connection and it says I'm connected -- it was working perfectly earlier, and all of a sudden, all my browsers stopped working. It all started happening this week. I've been using google chrome since I was able to install it without admin rights (I don't have admin priveleges on this computer) but one day that stopped working (I was connected to the internet but nothing would open on chrome), so I settled for internet explorer. Today I managed to install Opera without admin rights and that worked beautifully for a while. After an hour or so, it stopped working. I checked Internet Explorer - that stopped working too. I looked up ways to check my internet connection - it says I'm connected, but the ping command doesn' [cont.]
Asked by happpenstance - Fri Feb 26 23:45:15 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. It sounds to me like your wireless connection to the router is good, but the router's connection to the internet is down. You need to login to your router and check its status. Verify that it has a connection to your ISP and that it has a valid ip address.
Answered by Rute - Sat Feb 27 00:44:19 2010
How do hostnames work on a LAN?
Q. On my LAN i can use a computers hostname instead of its IP address to refer to it, but how does this work? Nslookup doesnt work with the hostnames, so its not using DNS. Is it something to do with NetBIOS? However it works, is my router the central 'server' for the hostnames?
Asked by zadatak - Tue Nov 6 10:33:38 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Every computer on the Lan will have a "computer name" these are indeed broadcast by NetBios (if enabled) and in the TCP headers and they are contactable by the computer name. If you have two computers with the same name.. they wont work correctly by name although will be reachable by IP! Your router in this case is just a switch sending packets to the correct "destination" in fact you could even replace it with a switch and the systems would still work (if you put an IP on each machine or have another DHCP server!) So in a strange way I guess you can say the router is the "server" but its not used at all really for hostname broadcast except to connect the LAN machines to each other. Try going to a command line on your machine and… [cont.]
Answered by Tracy L - Tue Nov 6 10:42:24 2007
Q. On my LAN i can use a computers hostname instead of its IP address to refer to it, but how does this work? Nslookup doesnt work with the hostnames, so its not using DNS. Is it something to do with NetBIOS? However it works, is my router the central 'server' for the hostnames?
Asked by zadatak - Tue Nov 6 10:33:38 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Every computer on the Lan will have a "computer name" these are indeed broadcast by NetBios (if enabled) and in the TCP headers and they are contactable by the computer name. If you have two computers with the same name.. they wont work correctly by name although will be reachable by IP! Your router in this case is just a switch sending packets to the correct "destination" in fact you could even replace it with a switch and the systems would still work (if you put an IP on each machine or have another DHCP server!) So in a strange way I guess you can say the router is the "server" but its not used at all really for hostname broadcast except to connect the LAN machines to each other. Try going to a command line on your machine and… [cont.]
Answered by Tracy L - Tue Nov 6 10:42:24 2007
cant get my Vista command prompt to reply to 'nslookup'.why?
Q. cant get my Vista command prompt to reply to 'nslookup'.why?
Asked by dylanevans1 - Mon May 7 23:59:59 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. If nslookup isn't working it is usually because your DNS setting is improperly configured, or there is a firewall that is blocking (either software or hardware) the attempted connection.
Answered by Amanda H - Tue May 8 00:06:03 2007
Q. cant get my Vista command prompt to reply to 'nslookup'.why?
Asked by dylanevans1 - Mon May 7 23:59:59 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. If nslookup isn't working it is usually because your DNS setting is improperly configured, or there is a firewall that is blocking (either software or hardware) the attempted connection.
Answered by Amanda H - Tue May 8 00:06:03 2007
What is DNS and How to configure it in Windows Server2003?
Q. How can i configure a Basic DNS server in Windows Server2003? please explain in brief steps. and How can i test it? (nslookup? ???) Where can i find more information on DNS configuration and implementation? Thanks
Asked by Saleem - Wed Oct 10 21:03:36 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Uh, why would you need to configure a DNS (domain name system) server if you don't even know what it is? (oh, probably you mean configure a client to use a server, not configure a server itself...) DNS is used to translate the hostnames us humans use to identify computer hosts (e.g., websites like answers.yahoo.com) into an IP (internet protocol) address that can be routed across the internet. Whenever you go to a website in your browser a DNS request is made to obtain the IP for that site. So every client machine needs to know the DNS server that your organization or ISP provided you with for resolving these names. If this is what you mean by "configure a DNS server" then this is easy. Commonly, you would be getting your host's IP… [cont.]
Answered by Erik W - Wed Oct 10 23:43:23 2007
Q. How can i configure a Basic DNS server in Windows Server2003? please explain in brief steps. and How can i test it? (nslookup? ???) Where can i find more information on DNS configuration and implementation? Thanks
Asked by Saleem - Wed Oct 10 21:03:36 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Uh, why would you need to configure a DNS (domain name system) server if you don't even know what it is? (oh, probably you mean configure a client to use a server, not configure a server itself...) DNS is used to translate the hostnames us humans use to identify computer hosts (e.g., websites like answers.yahoo.com) into an IP (internet protocol) address that can be routed across the internet. Whenever you go to a website in your browser a DNS request is made to obtain the IP for that site. So every client machine needs to know the DNS server that your organization or ISP provided you with for resolving these names. If this is what you mean by "configure a DNS server" then this is easy. Commonly, you would be getting your host's IP… [cont.]
Answered by Erik W - Wed Oct 10 23:43:23 2007
Are there any five or six letter words that aren't already registered .com names?
Q. I know that I can use nslookup to exhaustively search domain names, but I'm curious to see if anyone else has already done this. Certainly, all the three and four letter words are already taken. Are there any five or six letter words left?
Asked by chris - Fri Feb 1 10:01:51 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Try: Selgnis Oerane Good Luck.
Answered by Sasha - Fri Feb 1 23:17:27 2008
Q. I know that I can use nslookup to exhaustively search domain names, but I'm curious to see if anyone else has already done this. Certainly, all the three and four letter words are already taken. Are there any five or six letter words left?
Asked by chris - Fri Feb 1 10:01:51 2008 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Try: Selgnis Oerane Good Luck.
Answered by Sasha - Fri Feb 1 23:17:27 2008
How can I turn a PII Laptop into a linux net admin tool?
Q. I need to find a linux distribution for my old old laptop. Here's the specs: - PII 333 MHz Processor - 96 MB RAM - 3.3 GB Hard Drive - No integrated NIC - USB Ethernet Dongle (Linksys USB200M) - 24X CDROM - USB Port I'm wanting to convert the laptop into a network admin tool. I'd like to use it to accomplish the following tasks: - Monitor network nodes (PING, SNMP, Latency Tests) - Network Connectivity and Routing Tests (Telnet, Dig, NSLOOKUP, etc) - Packet Captures and packet analysis - Web browsing - Linux command practices - GUI interface So I'm looking for a distribution that will work with my specs and provide as much network tools and functionality as possible. But wait, there's more =P I plan to leave the laptop up and… [cont.]
Asked by mikeyb - Tue Mar 27 22:00:04 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. First, I would suggest that you check for Linux editions on-line, then check the requirements for each before picking one to use. Second, I would suggest that you learn a little about using Linux before you try setting up administration from one. (load a linux version and read all the docs, and experiment with the various programming possibilities until you are familiar with the operations required, OR take a course in Linux operation) With that old a system, I would suggest you use one of the earlier versions and/or get one where you can control what "packages" are loaded and load only what you have to have. Myself, I have 9 different versions on 2 machines, and have over 150 versions available on CD at this time; and i have not… [cont.]
Answered by f100_supersabre - Tue Mar 27 22:59:17 2007
Q. I need to find a linux distribution for my old old laptop. Here's the specs: - PII 333 MHz Processor - 96 MB RAM - 3.3 GB Hard Drive - No integrated NIC - USB Ethernet Dongle (Linksys USB200M) - 24X CDROM - USB Port I'm wanting to convert the laptop into a network admin tool. I'd like to use it to accomplish the following tasks: - Monitor network nodes (PING, SNMP, Latency Tests) - Network Connectivity and Routing Tests (Telnet, Dig, NSLOOKUP, etc) - Packet Captures and packet analysis - Web browsing - Linux command practices - GUI interface So I'm looking for a distribution that will work with my specs and provide as much network tools and functionality as possible. But wait, there's more =P I plan to leave the laptop up and… [cont.]
Asked by mikeyb - Tue Mar 27 22:00:04 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments
A. First, I would suggest that you check for Linux editions on-line, then check the requirements for each before picking one to use. Second, I would suggest that you learn a little about using Linux before you try setting up administration from one. (load a linux version and read all the docs, and experiment with the various programming possibilities until you are familiar with the operations required, OR take a course in Linux operation) With that old a system, I would suggest you use one of the earlier versions and/or get one where you can control what "packages" are loaded and load only what you have to have. Myself, I have 9 different versions on 2 machines, and have over 150 versions available on CD at this time; and i have not… [cont.]
Answered by f100_supersabre - Tue Mar 27 22:59:17 2007
How to interpret (with c++) what the command line spits back at you?
Q. i'm doing an nslookup with the system() function in c++ and i need to write some code in c++ that will somehow, redirect what the nslookup returns, into a text file. so basically, i need to redirect whatever the command line returns into a text file whenever i do a system() call.
Asked by Joe V - Thu Jul 24 22:23:25 2008 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments
A. Suppose your command is: "nslookup -type=ns example.com" and you want the output to be redirected into a file named: "example.txt" The command you will pass to the system() function will be: "nslookup -type=ns example.com > example.txt 2>&1" This should work on Posix (Linux/Unix) or Winnt (Windows) systems.
Answered by digitallysmooth - Fri Jul 25 00:33:16 2008
Q. i'm doing an nslookup with the system() function in c++ and i need to write some code in c++ that will somehow, redirect what the nslookup returns, into a text file. so basically, i need to redirect whatever the command line returns into a text file whenever i do a system() call.
Asked by Joe V - Thu Jul 24 22:23:25 2008 - - 1 Answers - 1 Comments
A. Suppose your command is: "nslookup -type=ns example.com" and you want the output to be redirected into a file named: "example.txt" The command you will pass to the system() function will be: "nslookup -type=ns example.com > example.txt 2>&1" This should work on Posix (Linux/Unix) or Winnt (Windows) systems.
Answered by digitallysmooth - Fri Jul 25 00:33:16 2008
which are the security vulnerabilities for these command?
Q. I'm making a research and i would like to know the vulnerability for these command of linux and windows: ipconfig,if config,telnet,ping,tracer oute, tracert, nslookup, arp, netstat, nbstat, route, finger, whois, IPv6, snmp. it's hard to find these information on the web! thank you!!
Asked by Lakshmy - Mon Nov 19 06:58:03 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. try to visit this: that's for MS-DOS command
Answered by ~o0o~ - Mon Nov 19 07:14:31 2007
Q. I'm making a research and i would like to know the vulnerability for these command of linux and windows: ipconfig,if config,telnet,ping,tracer oute, tracert, nslookup, arp, netstat, nbstat, route, finger, whois, IPv6, snmp. it's hard to find these information on the web! thank you!!
Asked by Lakshmy - Mon Nov 19 06:58:03 2007 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
A. try to visit this: that's for MS-DOS command
Answered by ~o0o~ - Mon Nov 19 07:14:31 2007
Which Windows XP command displays the route taken by packets crossing an IP network?
Q. Which Windows XP command displays the route taken by packets crossing an IP network? iproute netview nslookup ping tracert
Asked by khaled 2010 - Thu Apr 3 11:21:53 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
Q. Which Windows XP command displays the route taken by packets crossing an IP network? iproute netview nslookup ping tracert
Asked by khaled 2010 - Thu Apr 3 11:21:53 2008 - - 2 Answers - 0 Comments
Why does Internet Explorer suddenly lose its DNS connection?
Q. I have two DNS servers: the preferred one serves internet names and the second one is for the internal network. The preferred one is supposed to be replicating and caching entries from our ISP. Every once in a while, a client running IE 6.0 SP1 (on 2000 clients, it's SP2 on XP) will start throwing DNS errors such as "Cannot load the search page". The problem seems to be between IE and DNS because nslookup does connect to the DNS server and does give correct lookup info. When I copy and paste the number (which amounts to doing the DNS lookup manually for IE) a page does load, except for things in the HTML which ref objects by a symbolic DNS name (again, the DNS lookup still fails). I am thinking about setting up the internal DNS… [cont.]
Asked by sideshot72 - Thu May 25 08:31:47 2006 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Multiple network adapters can be problematic Extraneous network adapters and drivers which are not connected, are inoperative or unnecessary should be removed from your system. These can cause unpredictable network behavior. * AOL and other proprietary adapters may work fine if you have the service and are actively using it. If, however you are not using the adapter, it may be configured improperly and has been known to cause connectivity issues. * ndswan and other VPN adapters can be problematic if they are not in use. PPPOE (Point to Point Protocol Over Ethernet) may be used in some DSL or Cable connections; if it is not used, it may cause problems with the connection, and should be removed. * Certain brands of… [cont.]
Answered by Spock - Thu May 25 09:02:57 2006
Q. I have two DNS servers: the preferred one serves internet names and the second one is for the internal network. The preferred one is supposed to be replicating and caching entries from our ISP. Every once in a while, a client running IE 6.0 SP1 (on 2000 clients, it's SP2 on XP) will start throwing DNS errors such as "Cannot load the search page". The problem seems to be between IE and DNS because nslookup does connect to the DNS server and does give correct lookup info. When I copy and paste the number (which amounts to doing the DNS lookup manually for IE) a page does load, except for things in the HTML which ref objects by a symbolic DNS name (again, the DNS lookup still fails). I am thinking about setting up the internal DNS… [cont.]
Asked by sideshot72 - Thu May 25 08:31:47 2006 - - 5 Answers - 0 Comments
A. Multiple network adapters can be problematic Extraneous network adapters and drivers which are not connected, are inoperative or unnecessary should be removed from your system. These can cause unpredictable network behavior. * AOL and other proprietary adapters may work fine if you have the service and are actively using it. If, however you are not using the adapter, it may be configured improperly and has been known to cause connectivity issues. * ndswan and other VPN adapters can be problematic if they are not in use. PPPOE (Point to Point Protocol Over Ethernet) may be used in some DSL or Cable connections; if it is not used, it may cause problems with the connection, and should be removed. * Certain brands of… [cont.]
Answered by Spock - Thu May 25 09:02:57 2006
From Yahoo Answer Search: 'nslookup'
Sun Mar 21 13:12:38 2010 [ refresh local cache ]
