What planet are you from!!!!
PIX flux capacitors have had anti negative-induction protection since 4.47
(and who can't remember the fabled matter-anti-matter bug of 4.45)...
Sheesh......


-----Original Message-----
From: John Neiberger [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, July 09, 2001 9:29 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Failover distance between two PIXes [7:11468]


But beware...if you upgrade using a non-Cisco positronic quasitator, you
run the risk of creating a negative induction through the flux capacitor
which will result in inverted backpressure toward the source.  This has
the effect of cancelling out the signal or at least reducing it to the
point where you can never achieve failover. 

Besides, it voids your warranty.

regards,
John (who must not have enough work to do!)

>>> "Peter Slow"  7/9/01 10:09:31 AM >>>
quite simply, you need to upgrade the positronic quasitator on the
motherboard of your packet-dropping device. this will allow the
electron
flows to migrate from the electro-channeling device over the
flex-capacitor
to a lambda on the quanta-channeling circuit.

-Peter Slow

-----Original Message-----
From: Patrick Ramsey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
Sent: Monday, July 09, 2001 11:35 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Subject: Re: Failover distance between two PIXes [7:11468]


Without the serial cable, there is no way to keep the configs updated
on
both machines.  The ethernet cables are actualy what control failover.

In theory, you could run ip to and from a termserver on either end and
connect to a local serial port from that term server to the pix.

IE. PIX1---->serial to TS1------>ethernet----->TS2------->serial to
pix2

Remember for failover to take place though you still have to have an
ethernet connection between the two, and for stateful failover it must
be
full duplex.

-Patrick

>>> "RB Jsn Eggert Gupmundsson"  07/09/01 11:18AM >>>
Is there any way to create failover between PIXes over longer distance
than
the max limit of the failover cable (modified RS-232). I am thinking
of
connecting two houses. The distanse between them is around 2
kilometers.
There is an Gb Ethernet optical cable between them that I can use if
the PIX
supports it. I have looked on the CCO but have not seen any article
about
this.

Regards
Jon Eggert Gudmundsson
Network Administrator
Icelandic Banks Data Center




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