i am gonna add you to my msn.. I have a degree in networking and such and know exactly what to do
As a note above. You do not always need to know the ip address of the ISP's DNS server. This can help, especially when trouble shooting but most routers and such today will forward or act as a dns server. This means you can simply place that router address in your primary dns and be good to go
Also a note to above is thats how you set a static ip to the machine but you should remove that from your dhcp pool or in this case he can use the lan clients tab and it will make sure that his dhcp server in his router does not assign that address to a computer. Either way ill try to catch you on msn chrispy. Oh my msn will say shorty@