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<0> as long as it is available for them when they want to use it...all is good <0> IMO <0> well chief...i'm out like a fat kid in dodgeball <0> good chat. <1> woo <1> night man <0> night <2> heh <1> ? <2> ! <1> how would you deal with it SorcererX? <2> deal with what? <1> uh, neighborly internet deals <2> I wouldn't do it
<2> my neighbours would annoy me to death <2> and i'd annoy them to death <2> ;) <1> re: support? :) <2> no <1> or payables? <2> re "someone is using all the bandwidth again" <1> aah. lol <1> thats if youve got high-usage neighbors <2> well <1> or you yourself dloads much <2> if the neighbours were low usage <2> I'd still be using a lot <1> exactly heh <2> I'm used to 100 Mbit up/down <1> lol <1> addicted to speeed <2> it's like.. when you've tried broadband once <2> you never want to go back to dialup <1> yesh. i agree. <2> but I must admit.. I was pretty happy with 2.3 Mbit SDSL <1> you got big fat pipes where you work? <2> there too <1> aha. no wonder <2> but that's more in the gigabit+ range <2> :) <1> hence 100Mb/s <2> my work is.. hmm.. 3.5 km away <1> so why not raise the level of service so others could benefit? :) <2> raise what service? <1> AND get to pay for such a service at a quarter of the cost <1> uh ,ISP <1> its like a Cooperative internet gateway lol <2> can't get more than 100 Mbit here <1> oh dang lol <1> whats your main usage for it at home though? <2> even if you could upgrade the switches to get 1000 Mbit to everyone <2> serving <2> :) <1> AHA! <2> there's no restrictions except for "no commercial usage" pretty much <1> webhost? <2> well I mostly just use it to IRC ;) <2> some web stuff yeah <2> but not much <1> aah <3> hi all, is there a fax server (software) that has the following features: fax in and out possible, file format doesn't matter but .pdf is preferred, can be shared on the LAN. please advise. thanks. I did google but i want someone who had experience on on using it. <4> hi all <4> is this like Cisco type networking ? <4> or human networking ? <5> computer networking <4> ok !! <4> Cisco ctuff ? <5> ask anyway
<4> i have to re-cert my ccna <4> can anyone help <4> need some study material <4> back again ! <4> any1 know of any free resources ? <4> for Cisco certs ? <6> heaps of CCNA mock questions around <6> plus the simulators <7> mmm <4> like 4 free ppl ! <4> yes I get mocked if I cant answer the questions right <5> heh <4> i wrote my certs about 5 years ago and they lapsed ! <4> so now i have to re-do it <4> so now im asking all the nice ppl <1> JC^Omega i have a job for you.... ;) <7> heh <7> I'm not sure I want that job <1> lol <7> ;) <2> lol <8> I have a question, for the SBS that we just setup users need to set there DHCP DNS to 192.168.91.10 to use the SBS's server so that the sharepoint website works, http://companyweb/ however some of are users are laptops and when they take these machines home they will be connecting to a DHCP server both and need to have it automatically ***ign the DNS server address, how can I get around this so that when on the domain its our SBS IP and when not its automat <8> ic? <5> dhcp dns? <5> the dhcp should be providing the correct dns info. I ***ume the same under vpn <9> I think he's confusing intranet names with publicly available names <8> yea, thing is, our sbs doesn't between the ISP connection and the clients, it comes from a hardware firewall and acts as part of the network <8> had I set it up theother way it would be fine <8> using just dhcp <9> why isnt your domain announced publicly? <9> why do they have to use your DNS server to reach it? <5> sharepoint website for the internet public or internal (intranet) use only? <8> sharepoint internal <5> using a vpn? <8> no, its internal, shouldn't need vpn <9> no way to reach that from the internet. its a local name <5> they are home, not at the office, how is that internal? <8> no, they are here, I was just testing <8> let me start over <9> please do :) <8> ok, so LAPTOP on the internal network can not access the sharepoint website unless they change their lan DNS server address to 192.168.93.10, which is fine, however once that laptop user goes home and attempts to connect to their network they aren't able to browse any websites because the DNS is still set to 192.168.93.10 when it should be set to automatically, providing their router is setup with DHCP <8> what I'm looking for is a setting that will only put user on DNS 192.168.93.10 when connected to the domain <5> it can't be both staticly ***igned and auto at the same time <9> yeah... why are you setting the DNS static? thats what DHCP is for <5> easiest way is to setup a proper dhcp server at work <8> so if I changed the routers dhcp DNS settings to 192.168.93.10 it should work fine then? <5> you would need to set the dhcp server to give out that ip for dns <8> ok which I just did <8> let me see if this works <8> hrmm, seems to have worked <8> thanks! <9> you had the answer in your question :) <5> np <7> narf <10> http://www.bigbruin.com/2006/enermaxgalaxy_1 <11> re <10> m00 <12> hellop <12> I have 8 computers on win98 and one on winxp <12> the network works but internet on the xp one doesnt work <13> clearly you should install win98 on that computer too then <12> now 2 days work fine
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