Senin, 09 Januari 2012

How to Setup DNS on your Computer


How to Setup DNS on your Computer

Like OpenDNS, Google today launched their own public DNS service that they say will make your web-surfing experience "faster, safer and more reliable."
If you want to access a site (say example.com) from your browser, your computer needs the IP address of the web server that is hosting that domain. The computer will then query a public DNS server to find the IP address of the site example.com.
Google DNS Servers
This DNS server is generally maintained by your ISP but now you can instruct your computer (or wireless router) to use Google's DNS server instead of your ISP's DNS server. Google says their Public DNS Servers are hosted in data centers worldwide, and they use anycast routing to send users to the geographically closest data center.
If you are keen on making the switch to Google DNS, here're the steps involved for Windows XP, Vista and Windows 7.
Video: Setup Google DNS on Windows XP
Select Internet Protocol Version 4 (TCP/IPv4), followed by Properties and them replace the IP addresses of your Preferred DNS server and Alternate DNS server with the IP addresses of the Google DNS servers which are 8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4 - the order doesn't matter.
Screencast: Use Google DNS Servers on Windows 7 / Vista
In the above videos, I have changed settings for an Ethernet (LAN) connection but the steps are similar for Wireless networks as well.
In case you would like to setup Google DNS at the router level, open your router dashboard (e.g., http://192.168.1.1) and put the Google DNS server addresses (8.8.8.8 and 8.8.4.4) as your DNS server settings and apply.

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