You'll need to either set up port forwarding on the Router -- saying something like "this port (or range of ports) maps to this IP address" -- or put the machine in the "DMZ", which means that all of the ports of the machine end up being exposed when you go to the router address.
Typically, you can do this in the Web UI of the router, though I don't know your specific model well enough to suggest how.
Also, if Verizon finds you're running a server on another port, I'm pretty sure it's a violation of your ToS, just for the record. (This is one of the reasons we bother to pay speakeasy the extra $15/month.)
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Date: 2008-11-19 05:13 pm (UTC)Typically, you can do this in the Web UI of the router, though I don't know your specific model well enough to suggest how.
Also, if Verizon finds you're running a server on another port, I'm pretty sure it's a violation of your ToS, just for the record. (This is one of the reasons we bother to pay speakeasy the extra $15/month.)