- Local time
- 4:45 PM
- Messages
- 173
Hi Everyone,
I am attempting to configure a TP-Link TL-PS110P Print Server from a remote location.
From my location I am accessing a laptop which is connected to the same physical network as the Print Server. However the laptop has an I.P. address of 192.168.170.10, and it is connected directly into a router with the I.P. address of 192.168.170.254, whereas the Print Server has a default I.P. address of 192.168.0.10.
Within the laptop I have set a static route to the Print Servers I.P. address, below is a screen capture of the laptops route table.
As can be seen above (in yellow highlight) there is now a route from the laptop to the Print Server. However I am unable to ping the Print Server, and entering the Print Server's address into a browser results in no configuration page being loaded.
All this being said when I use a Network detection program I can clearly see that the Print Server can be reached on the network, as shown below.
How can I go about loading the Print Servers configuration page through a web browser? I have tried http://192.168.0.10, and https://192.168.0.10. Furthermore the same network has an identical TP-Link Print Server connected, and I can reach it's configuration page (due to it being on the I.P. address 192.168.170.229), and I can see that by default the Print Server does not require an explicit Port number to be specified.
I am quite stuck here, any suggestions will be greatly appreciated.
Kind Regards,
Davo
I am attempting to configure a TP-Link TL-PS110P Print Server from a remote location.
From my location I am accessing a laptop which is connected to the same physical network as the Print Server. However the laptop has an I.P. address of 192.168.170.10, and it is connected directly into a router with the I.P. address of 192.168.170.254, whereas the Print Server has a default I.P. address of 192.168.0.10.
Within the laptop I have set a static route to the Print Servers I.P. address, below is a screen capture of the laptops route table.
As can be seen above (in yellow highlight) there is now a route from the laptop to the Print Server. However I am unable to ping the Print Server, and entering the Print Server's address into a browser results in no configuration page being loaded.
All this being said when I use a Network detection program I can clearly see that the Print Server can be reached on the network, as shown below.
How can I go about loading the Print Servers configuration page through a web browser? I have tried http://192.168.0.10, and https://192.168.0.10. Furthermore the same network has an identical TP-Link Print Server connected, and I can reach it's configuration page (due to it being on the I.P. address 192.168.170.229), and I can see that by default the Print Server does not require an explicit Port number to be specified.
I am quite stuck here, any suggestions will be greatly appreciated.
Kind Regards,
Davo
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 (XP, by Virtualization)Intel i7 3820 (@ 3.6GHz)16 Gig DDR3 2133 (overclocked @ 2933MHz - 22G...ATI Radeon HD7800
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- Velocity
- OS
- Windows 7 (XP, by Virtualization)
- CPU
- Intel i7 3820 (@ 3.6GHz)
- Motherboard
- Gigabtye X79-UP4
- Memory
- 16 Gig DDR3 2133 (overclocked @ 2933MHz - 22GB/s)
- Graphics Card(s)
- ATI Radeon HD7800
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 3
- Screen Resolution
- 6400 x 1440 (3 Monitors, 1 Extra High Def!)
- Hard Drives
- 500G SSD RAID 0 (Seq Read @ 889MB/s | Seq Write @ 844MB/s)
- PSU
- 700 Watt
- Case
- Thermaltake
- Keyboard
- Microsoft
- Mouse
- Logitech
- Internet Speed
- 20Mbps
- Antivirus
- AVG Internet Security Business Edition
- Browser
- Chrome
- Other Info
- 7.7 on the Windows 7 INDEX! Not quite 7.9!!!