Depending on your budget, the distance between offices and
the users
at each location..there are about a million different ways
to
accomplish this...
As Justin said...we need more details to offer ideas that
would be
useful.
Or..I could say something like: Take a really long ethernet
cable and
plug your location 1 router into location 2's switch. At
location 1
add the location2 to the routing table but leave your
standard default
gateway.
--sean
On Dec 17, 1:25 pm, Justin Brown <jcbr... gmail.com> wrote:
> If I can give you some adivce, I would say be more
specific here. For
> starters, I would include exactly what you'd like to
accomplish, where
> these two sites are in geographical relation to each
other, how you're
> going to provide connectivity between them, and whether
or not you've
> got servers and domains at each of these sites.
>
> The more information you offer up the more likely you
are to garner a
> useful response. The converse is also true, the less
information you
> share the less likely anyone will care about your
situation and issues
> because (frankly) they won't take you seriously.
>
> On Dec 17, 11:23 am, IT Officer Lovell
<AtomicCompu... gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> > I have two locations, I want to comebine the
networks, but not share
> > the internet connection (so location A can connect
to Location B's
> > Shared Folders)
> > How do i do this
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