On Tue, 10 Jun 1997, Richard Morin wrote: > As the proud new "user" of a cable modem from Rogers cable here in > Canada and I can say that the configuration was very easy. No need for > dhcpd(sp?) clients at all > > 1. The ethernet device is a SMC Etherez 8416, which was supported by > SMC-Ultra in the kernel. (I think other users may get a 3com...so either > way the kernel supports them.) > > 2. I was assigned a static IP address, told the netmask, and gateway > machine. > > I set up the ethernet device, set up the routes, then changed my current > configs to point at the new name servers, ect.....bingo. It is very fast, > but there aren't many people on it yet, remember this is just a test. I > grabbed a new kernel from sunsite with netscape in windows, and watched as > it climbed to 34k/s. I know it isn't scientific by any means, but that is > 10X faster than anything I've achieved with my 28.8 modem.
This is not the case with the Wave in Burlington, Ontario (via CableNet which I think leases the technology from Rogers). IP addresses are assigned dynamically and therefore dhcpcd is needed. I installed debian and configured the network exactly as I would do in my office in Kingston (permanently on net, static ip) but when it asked for ip, netmask, etc. I just took the defaults (arbitrary addresses shown for example) because I did not know what to put there instead. I grabbed the packages necessary to get dhcpcd going with only the five base disks installed (netstd, linreadline2, ncurses3.0,cpp,dhcpcd) and installed them with dpkg. I then installed the dhcpcd package and looked in /etc/dhcpc/* and low and behold, dhcpcd had already configured everything to get ip addresses from cgocable.net. COOL. nothing else to do. Next, I fired up dselect and used the ftp option and I now have a complete 1.3 system. Should some mention of this be put into the installation guide? > Price, when it rolls out is in the $50-60/month range, I knew you'd be > curious.....no, I don't work for them.. This may sound expensive, but when you think about it, it seems fair to me. Consider the alternative - installation and monthly charge of a second phone line is around CAN$20, an isp is around CAN$20 (?), and considering there may be download charges past a certain time limit with the isp (and/or restrictions on the time of day) and that wave downloads are much faster than standard phone line isps, it could be a bargain. Cheers, Colin. -- Colin R. Telmer, Institute of Intergovernmental Relations School of Policy Studies, Queen's University Kingston, Ontario, Canada, K7L-3N6 (613)545-6000x4219 [EMAIL PROTECTED] PGP Fingerprint = 09 E9 DA 66 9C EE 33 DC B8 3B 97 0E 01 BC EC 0B PGP Public Key at <URL:http://terrapin.econ.queensu.ca> -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word "unsubscribe" to [EMAIL PROTECTED] . Trouble? e-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] .