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What is a gateway, and why would I need one?

The word gateway has many different meanings in the IT world. A protocol translating gateway translates between different protocols. Think of it as the United Nations interpreter of the networking world. If the president of the United States needs to exchange information with the president of France, but neither speaks the other's language, they can call in someone who is fluent in both to help them get their messages across. Similarly, if a mainframe system and a Windows 2000 computer need to communicate with one another-perhaps the mainframe has important files that need to be accessed by the PC-but they don't know how to "talk" to each other, you can install a gateway to clear up the confusion. The gateway is even more skilled than the interpreter is; it actually fools the mainframe into believing it's communicating with another mainframe, and makes the PC think it is having a "conversation" with a fellow PC. Gateway is also the term used to refer to the address of a router that connects your network to another, acting as the gateway to the "outside world.