Mac Adress
Mac Adress
Anyone know how i change my mac adress of my network card?
I have found this web page , but this is not working.
http://www.jsiinc.com/SUBG/TIP3000/rh3020.htm
I have found this web page , but this is not working.
http://www.jsiinc.com/SUBG/TIP3000/rh3020.htm
That would be chaos - too many folks would end up with the same MAC...dunno either
On the other hand, many soho routers allow you to manually input the MAC for the WAN.
Skye
On the other hand, many soho routers allow you to manually input the MAC for the WAN.
Skye
anything is possible - nothing is free

Blisster wrote:It *would* be brokeback bay if I in fact went and hung out with Skye and co (did I mention he is teh hotness?)
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Kip Patterson
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1st 6 digits of MAC identify manufacturer, last 6 identify card itself; unique & can't be changed-burned into card. NAT Routers have their own unique MAC, but you can choose to have the router use the MAC addr of a NIC behind it instead of it's own. I'm curious, why would you want/ need to alter your MAC addr....hmmmm? 
When a problem comes along...You must whip it.....When something's going wrong...You must whip it....Whip it good...
Understand,
The Media Access Control number on your NIC is specific to the manufacturer and production lot of your card (It's not acutally a totally unique Identifier though it comes very close). It is a firmware fixed id and cannot be altered other than by altering the firmware.
There is some software that will let you alter the TCP/IP stack to report another MAC address, and as well, a router has the ability to spoof it's MAC address for yours.
Other than that you're pretty much out of luck. I'm not sure why you'd want to do this anyways.
Regards,
-Bouncer-
The Media Access Control number on your NIC is specific to the manufacturer and production lot of your card (It's not acutally a totally unique Identifier though it comes very close). It is a firmware fixed id and cannot be altered other than by altering the firmware.
There is some software that will let you alter the TCP/IP stack to report another MAC address, and as well, a router has the ability to spoof it's MAC address for yours.
Other than that you're pretty much out of luck. I'm not sure why you'd want to do this anyways.
Regards,
-Bouncer-
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howie1253