On Monday 11 December 2006 22:56, Sergio Polini wrote:
Yes, it was OT and very few of you are interested ;-)
However, somebody would like to know who the killer was.
The original subject was wlan0 is ssslw [99% SOLVED] because
pinging the Belkin F5D7230-4 wireless router worked from
Mick:
On Monday 11 December 2006 20:56, Sergio Polini wrote:
Yes, it was OT and very few of you are interested ;-)
However, somebody would like to know who the killer was.
The original subject was wlan0 is ssslw [99% SOLVED]
because pinging the Belkin F5D7230-4 wireless router
Yes, it was OT and very few of you are interested ;-)
However, somebody would like to know who the killer was.
The original subject was wlan0 is ssslw [99% SOLVED] because
pinging the Belkin F5D7230-4 wireless router worked from Windows but
not from Linux.
The answer is: because Windows
Richard Fish:
Ok, two things to try. First, remove the 192.168.2.1 nameserver
from resolve.conf. That nameserver may be broken and unable to
resolve names on the internet. This should help the ping
www.google.com case.
Yes, I've already said that, but you are great! ;-)
I read your
On 11/27/06, Sergio Polini [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
NB: ping www.google.com is slow, ping 192.168.2.1 is either too much
slow or blocked.
route is slow, route -n is fast.
Ok, two things to try. First, remove the 192.168.2.1 nameserver from
resolve.conf. That nameserver may be broken and
Scenario:
- I have a HAG (Home Access Gateway, which embodies an ADSL modem)
installed by my provider;
- the HAG has three RJ45 ports; when a PC is connected to one of
theese ports, it gets an IP address via DHCP;
- I have connected a Belkin wireless rooter to one of theese ports;
- I connect my
On 11/26/06, Sergio Polini [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I can just notice an astonishing difference between metrics: 25 under
Windows, 2000 (!) under Linux.
The absolute value of an interface metric is meaningless, they only
matter in relation to other interface metrics active at the time.
They
Richard Fish:
On 11/26/06, Sergio Polini [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I can just notice an astonishing difference between metrics: 25
under Windows, 2000 (!) under Linux.
The absolute value of an interface metric is meaningless, they only
matter in relation to other interface metrics active at
On 11/26/06, Sergio Polini [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
My pings (perhaps all DNS lookups) are slow even if connect my PC to
both the wireless router and the cable, i.e. when there are both
a fast (metric 0) and a slow (metric 2000) interface.
What do ifconfig wlan and iwconfig wlan report for the
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