(I posted this on the debian-user list, but I never got a response. Maybe, the folks here can shed some light since it's PCMCIA related...)
I've been fooling around with a 2.2 Debian distribution on a ThinkPad T20 (company laptop, *cough*), and the network transfers on my home LAN are really slow. After spending a few hours going through Deja and various HOW-TO's, I'm running out of hairs to pull... - The file transfers work fine when I boot Win98 up on the laptop so the network hardware should be ok. - I'm using a LinkSys PCMCIA card that's supposed to be NE2K based, and cardmgr recognizes it as such. Nothing seems to be amiss in the syslog with respect to picking up the card. - I was monitoring the eth0 interface with ifconfig, and the bigger the files, the worse the collisions become. A small file or info requests are fairly collision free, but transferring a 2.5 MB file will give me collisions of around 17-25% of the packets received. But the laptop is only negligibly competing for hub time vs. the other computers on the LAN . - I've tried excluding certain IRQs from the card in case there was a hardware conflict, but after excluding 3,4, 7, and 11, I'm starting to think that this isn't the issue. Does anybody here have any ideas as to what's going on? I thought Linksys was fairly decent wrt Linux compatibility (?) Steve

