I think that you should browse manually from that point and select the browser if this is what it asks for ..or ...insert the disk ..and connect the device ..and get from the browser to the manufacturer site..and see if they have a wizard you have to run for the procedure...I know for sure that the map loading requires some wizard ...
if your maps are not from Bushnell ...and are from Garmin for example ...get to the site from where the maps are ..
Or just look on the disk if there is such a wizard /program that you might need to run first ..
the idea is that when you update you run the update from the web browser and locate the device after ..and from the disk you only need the driver for communication ..
if you do not need the maps from the original disk ..just run the driver..and connect the device ..than go to the site..and the site have a wizard all the time that will locate the device as long as the communication is assured by the device's driver software
×
HTTP Web-browser Access
Most HTML browsers can be used, though Internet Explorer 4.0 or Netscape 4.0 are recommended. IE 2.0 and Netscape 2.0 and their predecessors are not supported. The HTML interface can be used to access the LAN (or WAN) IP address or it can be used with FTP to upload and download files to and from the router.
To log on to the modem via HTML:
1 Bring up your favorite web browser.
2 Enter the Ethernet IP address of the router (10.0.0.1 or Speedstream) in the "Location" or "Address" area where you enter web page addresses.
3 Refer to "HTML Web Interface" on page 20.
Page 20:
HTML Web Interface
The HTML interface for the router first displays a page showing the current configuration of the router. The first page also provides links to the following functions:
.
.
.
Advanced Setup
Leads to a more detailed interface with several links that allow more in-depth configuration of functions available on the router. This interface provides the following links:
• Configuration Procedures
• Status and Statistics
• Command List
This is where the user manual ends. I would suggest clicking "Configuration Procedures" and find the section for configuring Network Address Translation (NAT).
In that section (if it exists), you'll want to provide the private IP address of the computer running the Telnet server and forward port 23 to this IP address.
If NAT capabilities do not exist, I would consider changing the router to Gateway mode (described in the user manual) and buying your own router to handle the NAT firewall.
340 views
Usually answered in minutes!
×