Do not know that much about the stuff, but had a period it happened every
night.
Some one told me providers do change for some internal raison the IP you are
indentified with. If you move, without leaving your new adres at the post
office............. thats why ELVIS sang " return to sender ........"
Someone  can confirm this conclusion ?

Jos  on4kj
----- Original Message -----
From: "Larry Alkoff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "DX4WIN POSTINGS" <Dx4win@mailman.qth.net>; "STU" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, November 05, 2002 2:17 PM
Subject: Re: [Dx4win] Staying Connected to TELNET


> On Mon, 4 Nov 2002 21:05:25 -0800, STU wrote:
>
> >Is there anyone out there that has a hard time staying connected to
TELNET.
> >I have a high speed cable connection that works great for the Internet.
No
> >problems!
> >When connecting to a DX cluster via TELNET (with DX4WIN) and the activity
is
> >somewhat slow, I seem to get disconnected. During peak times such as
> >contests I stay connected just fine. I understand there is a so called
"keep
> >alive" option either in DX4WIN or some other outside source. The idea is
to
> >keep the traffic moving. If windows isn't seeing any traffic from you,
(some
> >ISP's as well.) disconnect you so others can use the IP you were on. Is
> >there a setting in DX4WIN using the TCP/IP setting with this so called
"keep
> >alive" feature? Please advise. TNX, 73 STU
> >
> >Please respond to: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> >
>
>
> I have noticed that normally I lose my connection in about an hour.
>
> My experiments indicate that the reason is that somehow Telnet attracts
> a swarm of attempted connections from various unknown urls that overload
the ability of
> Telnet to keep itself alive.
>
> Various methods of sending "keep alive" signals have made no difference.
>
> I maintain two machines - one is Linux.  If I establish a Telnet
connection under DX4Win
> and set the Linux machine to monitor connections using "tcpdump" which is
included in most
> Linux distributions, I can clearly see the attempted connections building
up - to as many as hundreds per second!
>
> This is a classic DOS (Denial of Service) attack.  Most people would be
unaware of the attack
> unless they are running an analysis tool like tcpdump.
>
> I've tried nearly a dozen different Telnet sites - the result has always
been the same.
> That is why I'm looking for a good http site that does automatic
refreshes.
>
> My connection is a 24 hour cablemodem (Time-Warner of Austin TX
RoadRunner)
> and I think that kind of connection is attractive to the kind of people
doing this.
> They can easily tell it's Time-Warner from the first few digits of the IP
address.
>
> Many have complained about the difficulty of keeping their Telnet
connection "up".
> Hope this information helps others.
>
> Larry Alkoff N2LA
>
>
>
> Larry Alkoff N2LA - Austin TX
>
>
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