Depends what side of the router it's getting a dynamic IP - if it's on your internet connection there probably isn't much you can do (other than coughing up for a static IP).
On the LAN side, you could set the router to dish out the same IP to your machine's MAC address.
i just took the easy way and set static ips which i need to port forward to on 3 machines 192.168.1.100 to 192.168.1.102 and then set dhcp to dish out ip addresses for other machines that don't matter from 192.168.1.110 onwards, thus avoiding conflicts
copy these..
ip address
subnet mask
default gateway
dns servers..
now open control panel, network conenctions, go into properties of the tcp/ip connection and type them in
to make it easier i'd set it to 192.168.1.123 or similar, you can also set your router's dhcp starting ip (say 192.168.1.105) -which would leave loads free for you to use..
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