E-Mail:
Get our new Windows 7 eBook (PDF) for $7 with 70+ Tips. Download Now!

A Little Free Network Help From My Friends

  • No Related Post

Add to iTunes | Add to YouTube | Add to Google | RSS Feed

The more computers you have connected to your home network, the bigger your need for good tools to manage that network. Recently, I had a need to discover the IP address for Ponzi’s machine, and asked the community if they knew of software I could use.

Wirelesspacket told me immediately about a program he uses from Softpedia called Network Scanner. This is a free tool, which is an excellent ’selling’ point for me.

I needed to find out the IP address of Ponzi’s machine so I could connect to it via VNC. This tool got all the information for me quickly and easily. I just had to open it, input a range of IP addresses, and click the “start scanning” button. Shortly, an excellent list of all the machines on my network was displayed before me. Not only did I get the IP address I needed, this tool also shows me much more:

  • Detects hardware (MAC) addresses
  • Detects hidden shared folders (normally invisible on the network) and write-accessible shares
  • Detects your internal and external IP addresses
  • Scans for listening TCP ports and SNMP services

The only drawback to this tool is that it is only Windows compatible. If there is an equivalent that you know of which works on OS X, I’d love to know about it.

Want to embed this video on your own site, blog, or forum? Use this code:

[tags]IP, network[/tags]

4 Comments

Hi Chris,

When I wanted to do something like this a while ago, I found a different utility that did the job. I used “The Dude”  http://www.mikrotik.com/thedude.php). I’ll try Network Scanner out as well.

Try nmap (”Network Mapper”) at

http://insecure.org/nmap/

It is supported on Linux, Microsoft Windows, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris, IRIX, Mac OS X, HP-UX, NetBSD, Sun OS, Amiga, and more.
Both command line and GUI versions so you shouldn’t have too much difficulty.

Naturally you will browse the insecure.org site while you’re there, won’t you?
If you can’t find a tool to do most any network job there then it really is off the wall!

Hey Chris,

I’m not a Mac guy but nmap works great with Linux. You can find a Mac OS X ported version here http://nmap.darwinports.com/ .

Another option would be to download nmap source code and compile on your box,
Info here: http://insecure.org/nmap/install/inst-macosx.html

Bob

What Do You Think?

 
41 queries / 0.636 seconds.