Yeah, apparently some of the modems memorize the hardware address of the
ethernet card, so if you change the card, you have to turn off the modem
for a few minutes. -chris
On Wed, 30 Aug 2000, Michael Smith wrote:
> BTW, I've hooked up several boxen to @home, and sometimes the "modem" needs
> t
Michael Smith wrote:
BTW, I've hooked up several boxen to @home, and sometimes the "modem" needs to
be
turned off. That's my big troubleshooting step if I can't ping the outside.
It's a step we take all the time on our CSU/DSU units (some people call
them modems).
Bottom line is that it w
BTW, I've hooked up several boxen to @home, and sometimes the "modem" needs to
be
turned off. That's my big troubleshooting step if I can't ping the outside.
Hm, I can't remember if I tried pinging the default gateway before
I got the connection going five minutes ago. No I'm not running an
internal network and never was. Anyway I'm glad it works now but
still shaky on the network problem diagnosis issue.. if I hadn't been
stubborn and tried 3 nics i m
First of all, I just got the connection working. Thanks to all.
Using the correct NIC driver did the trick, though note that I did try
two different NICs earlier this week with negative results.
To sum up: isapnp 3c509 no longer works (although the driver reports
no errors), pci NDC card with tuli
Can you ping your default gateway? Also are you running a internal network?
-- Original Message --
From: Chris Majewski <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Wed, 30 Aug 2000 11:28:22 -0700 (PDT)
>I have a cable connection to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>It worked under linux.
Chris Majewski wrote:
I have a cable connection to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
It worked under linux.
I now have a new machine.
Even with the same ethernet card as the old machine, I can't get
the connection going. Same settings, same ip address, no dhcp
(don't need it says Rogers, since my ip hasn't c
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