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  1. Member
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    I have a Sony Non-Wireless bluray player (BDP S1200) that I want to connect up so I can do Netflix. I also have a spare modem that I'm no longer using. Can that be connected to the player to get internet?
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  2. Going Mad TheFamilyMan's Avatar
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    Ideally you should have a wireless router which supplies your home's internet access, and those usually have ethernet cable connector sockets (a.k.a. ports) on them. Connecting a cat 5 ethernet cable between your router and your bluray player will give the bluray player access to the internet for its streaming apps. The term modem is very generic. But if you are talking about a dial-up modem of olden days (1990s, early 2000s), that won't work primarily because its data rate is much too slow for streaming video. An inexpensive (~$30 usd) alternative if you have wireless internet in your home, Roku makes a range of wireless internet streaming devices for streaming Netflix, and other such stuff, to your TV, though they connect directly to the TV via an HDMI cable.
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    Originally Posted by dfisher052 View Post
    I have a Sony Non-Wireless bluray player (BDP S1200) that I want to connect up so I can do Netflix. I also have a spare modem that I'm no longer using. Can that be connected to the player to get internet?
    No. You need one of two options to connect an Ethernet-only Blu-ray player without running an Ethernet cable to it: a universal Wi-Fi to Ethernet adapter (connects to a wireless network) or a set of powerline Ethernet adapters. Note that success with powerline Ethernet adapters depends on how your home is wired and the condition of your home's electrical wiring.

    Universal Wi-Fi to Ethernet adapters:
    https://www.amazon.com/IOGEAR-Universal-Ethernet-Adapter-GWU627/dp/B004UAKCS6/
    https://www.amazon.com/IOGEAR-Universal-Ethernet-Adapter-GWU627/dp/B018YPWORE/
    https://www.amazon.com/NETGEAR-Universal-Ethernet-Adapter-WNCE2001/dp/B003KPBRRW/

    Example of powerline Ethernet adapters:
    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01MTNKNPZ?ref_=ams_ad_dp_ttl
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    Sorry, I mis spoke. I want to connect spare Router to the Lan connection on my bluray player. Will that work?
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  5. Mod Neophyte Super Moderator redwudz's Avatar
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    If you can get an Ethernet cable to the player from your router, it can access the Internet and if you have a NetFlix membership,
    you should be able to use it to watch. The player may take some setup, but the Sony manual or website should be able to clarify.
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    Thanks!
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  7. Member Cornucopia's Avatar
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    Most people who get the internet from ISPs get it via a modem of some sort (modem in the modern generic sense = router + medium bridge/converter). Cable modem, FIOS modem, even ADSL modem.

    Your router portion separates the wider internet at large from you personal/home network.
    On the home side, you likely will have IP addresses in the range of 192.168.x.x.

    Unless you want the mess of multiple NATs and subnets, you want to make sure that any other device you put within your home net doesn't itself have routing/NAT enabled. Or if it does, you only connect to the Intranet side (as if a hub or switch) and not the WAN side.

    But it should be entirely doable.

    Scott
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    Thanks again.
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    Originally Posted by Cornucopia View Post
    Most people who get the internet from ISPs get it via a modem of some sort (modem in the modern generic sense = router + medium bridge/converter). Cable modem, FIOS modem, even ADSL modem.

    Your router portion separates the wider internet at large from you personal/home network.
    On the home side, you likely will have IP addresses in the range of 192.168.x.x.

    Unless you want the mess of multiple NATs and subnets, you want to make sure that any other device you put within your home net doesn't itself have routing/NAT enabled. Or if it does, you only connect to the Intranet side (as if a hub or switch) and not the WAN side.

    But it should be entirely doable.

    Scott
    True some ISPs now use residential gateways (for phone+Internet+cable) or issue combination modem-routers to their customers but in the past, other than FIOS, most issued ADSL modems or cable modems with only a single Ethernet port and no WiFi. These older modems can't be re-purposed as a switch. Network and device configuration issues aside, it isn't physically possible because there is just one Ethernet port and no WiFi. That is why I said "No".
    Last edited by usually_quiet; 30th Mar 2018 at 11:44.
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