Probably a problem with the compatibility between the Wireless N card and the Wireless N router. Try connecting to the router and configuring it to only go with wireless G or B/G speeds and see if your speed goes up
I agree with ModelWorks... if you have an old PC, PFsense would probably be your best bet. It will do a better job of QoS then a hacked home router, but I would recommend purchasing a Wireless Access Point or a good wireless router to act as your wireless connection, but disable everything but...
ohhhh ok.. its amazing how simple some things are once you get that one piece of info.. I keep forgetting about the source info and how it can be used to help narrow things down
Usually the higher the better, but if you want access in your basement you might want to put it higher up on the first floor and away from anything that could cause interference
I have another CCNA question about PATs. If you have two computers on a network and they both try to go to www.anandtech.com at the same time how would that work? Wouldn't they both try to go to IP:80?
and who decides what port the client and server are going to communicate on, the NAT...
yeah I get that a lot on these questions... really frustrates me when I see stuff like that. I am looking at the cisco practice questions now, and according to them 127.16.71.43 is a private IP range and 10.215.34.43 is not.... how am I supposed to study well for this when I keep finding stuff...
so you would say that the answer "Networks are segmented into multiple collision domains using bridges for CSMA/CD networks." is correct even though the question says it is wrong?
Ok, I am doing some practice questions for my CCNA test tomorrow and I rain accross a question dealing with CSMA/CD and it asked me to pick 3. One of the ones I picked was "Networks are segmented into multiple collision domains using bridges for CSMA/CD networks." Another question they had...
I have 10 Mb too and most sites will max mine out.. I use Ubuntu for my OS and every time I download updates for it, it goes at about 1.2 MB/s, which should be around my max.
It would be nice to know what the router is hooked too.. if it is a home router.. go for it if you are worried about it
Wow this thread has gone on for days without any reaction from the starter. and I love his join date of 12/30/1999 was he worried about the Y2K problem?
Matters what you are doing on your network... you mainly just need a switch that can handle all the drops you are going to have and then get a router that will handle the number of users. I would suggest the old computer being used with pfsense or smoothwall. Cisco routers are pretty expensive...
I forgot the rules on all that stuff, I think most of the time there is a range in speed that is needed and it should be supplied in the manual of the Motherboard.. you can also look up the vendor of the PC or Motherboard on the Crucial and Kingston sites to see what is recommended. They...
Then try setting it up with a static IP address outside your DHCP pool, or try moving it closer to see if you can get it to pick up an IP.. if you can you are just too far away
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