> Dan Everton wrote:
> >
> > On Tue, 24 Aug 1999, Aaron Solochek wrote:
> > > If its not too much of a pain in the ass you might want to try switching
> > > the
> > > oomputers around to see if the problem is in the campus infastructure.
> > > Are you in
> > > the same dorm? Are they switched
Dan Everton wrote:
>
> On Tue, 24 Aug 1999, Aaron Solochek wrote:
> > If its not too much of a pain in the ass you might want to try switching the
> > oomputers around to see if the problem is in the campus infastructure. Are
> > you in
> > the same dorm? Are they switched or shared connections
Dan Everton wrote:
> As for what I mean by locally and externally... we both live on campus at
> university and are connected to the residential network. Traffic within
> this network is fine and goes at full speed for my friend. The residential
> network is connected (through a firewall) to th
On Tue, 24 Aug 1999, Dan Everton wrote:
> On 24 Aug 1999, Jens Ritter wrote:
> > What do you mean by locally and externally? Two cards in different
> > directions?
>
> No interrupts and other cards are not the same. I have an ISA VIBRA16 and
> he has an ISA ESS688, I have an PCI S3 ViRGE, he has a
On Tue, 24 Aug 1999, Aaron Solochek wrote:
> If its not too much of a pain in the ass you might want to try switching the
> oomputers around to see if the problem is in the campus infastructure. Are
> you in
> the same dorm? Are they switched or shared connections? If you live in
> different
>
On 24 Aug 1999, Jens Ritter wrote:
> Dan Everton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > The weirdest part about this is that he has identical network card
> > (RTL-8029, using the ne2k-pci driver), identical kernel (2.2.11), identical
> > Debian install (potato as of yesterday) and identical config (ex
Dan Everton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> The weirdest part about this is that he has identical network card
> (RTL-8029, using the ne2k-pci driver), identical kernel (2.2.11), identical
> Debian install (potato as of yesterday) and identical config (except for the
> IP address of course :). I hav
On Tue, Aug 24, 1999 at 05:29:27PM +1000, Dan Everton wrote:
> This has to be one of the weirdest networking problems I've come across.
>
> A friend running Debian can transfer files on the local network at normal
> 10mbit speeds. However as soon as he tries to transfer stuff from outside the
> lo
This has to be one of the weirdest networking problems I've come across.
A friend running Debian can transfer files on the local network at normal
10mbit speeds. However as soon as he tries to transfer stuff from outside the
local net, transfer speeds drop to 30kB/s bursts as opposed to the
300-60
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