- Jan 21, 2005
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I've been fighting with the network at our office for a while now because it is slow beyond belief. It consists of 8 Windows Machines, 3 large format printers on an HP JetDirect Print Server, and an IBM RS/6000 server that is about 7 years old. It is connected like this.
Wireless Internet----> Linksys BEFW11S4 Router----> SMC 10/100MBS 16 port Switch, then the windows machines, print server, and the RS/6000 are plugged into the switches ports in no particular order. (Not a single cable is labeled and it is a mess)
The server is only used for one application and serves no file or internet sharing purposes. So I am fairly confident it isn't responsible. The windows machines are networked in a simple workgroup for file and printer sharing. If more than one person is on the internet everyone else grinds to a halt and receives timeouts and are constantly forced to refresh until it loads or give up. Our internet connection is 768 kbs down and 128 kbs up which is plenty because the internet is rarely used for anything more than mainly text websites, but even if someone transfers a small document or spreadsheet everyone else screeches to a halt until it has finished. Today I transfered a 45 kb spreadsheet from one system to the other and it took 45 seconds and anyone that was on the internet or printing something complained about how badly it slowed down.
Any places on where to start would be great. BTW all of the cabling was professionally done and is cat5e. I really need to figure this out before I pull my hair out.
Travis
Wireless Internet----> Linksys BEFW11S4 Router----> SMC 10/100MBS 16 port Switch, then the windows machines, print server, and the RS/6000 are plugged into the switches ports in no particular order. (Not a single cable is labeled and it is a mess)
The server is only used for one application and serves no file or internet sharing purposes. So I am fairly confident it isn't responsible. The windows machines are networked in a simple workgroup for file and printer sharing. If more than one person is on the internet everyone else grinds to a halt and receives timeouts and are constantly forced to refresh until it loads or give up. Our internet connection is 768 kbs down and 128 kbs up which is plenty because the internet is rarely used for anything more than mainly text websites, but even if someone transfers a small document or spreadsheet everyone else screeches to a halt until it has finished. Today I transfered a 45 kb spreadsheet from one system to the other and it took 45 seconds and anyone that was on the internet or printing something complained about how badly it slowed down.
Any places on where to start would be great. BTW all of the cabling was professionally done and is cat5e. I really need to figure this out before I pull my hair out.
Travis