On system 2 i have set ipv4 to 192 168 0 2 and everything else as above.
A crossover ethernet cable has got both its ends identical to each other.
These cables were created to support temporary host to host networking in situations where an intermediate device such as a network router is not present crossover cables look almost identical to ordinary straight through or patch ethernet cables but the internal wiring.
A crossover is used to connect two ethernet devices without a hub or for connecting two hubs.
Devices in a wired network are usually connected physically to a server modem router or each other with ethernet cables.
A straight thru cable has identical ends.
A crossover cable has different ends.
A registered jack 45 rj45 connector is a standard type of physical connector for network cables.
The wire that is crimped to pin 2 at one end is attached to pin 6 at the other end and the pins 3 and 6 wires go to pins 1 and 2 respectively in the other connector.
A crossover has one end with the orange set of wires switched.
A straight thru is used as a patch cord in ethernet connections.
A straight thru cable has identical ends.
The isp is spectrum.
The default gateway and dns server stay set at 192 167 0 1.
A crossover cable has different ends.
So those conflicting standards did end up being useful.
The other is connected to the internet via cat6 cable to the router.
The crossover cable follows both eia 568a and eia 568b.
Each end of an ethernet cable has a connector called an rj45 connector.
A straight thru is used as a patch cord in ethernet connections.
A crossover is used to connect two ethernet devices without a hub or for connecting two hubs.
Not only do the two systems not see each other if i try to.
A crossover has one end with the orange set of wires switched with the green set.
It is a at one end and b at the other.