Thank you very much. That was the problem.
Stelios

                -----Original Message-----
                From:   kaygee [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
                Sent:   21 March 2000 17:19
                To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                Subject:        Re: [expert] Connection problem

                He's right,
                You need a crossover cable for a direct connection, although
I'm not sure
                I agree with his suggestion that you buy a hub if you only
have two
                computers.  I'd just go with the crossover cable being a
college student
                myself:)

                Keith
                ----------
                There's ease of use and then there's ease of usefulness.
                Choose usefulness. Choose Linux.

                On Tue, 21 Mar 2000, Charles Curley wrote:

                > On Tue, Mar 21, 2000 at 01:32:54PM -0000, Antoniou,
Stylianos wrote:
                > -> Hi there,
                > -> I have configured two PCs (Mandrake7.0 & RedHat6.1) in
my college network.
                > -> When the network cards are connected to the network
sockets everything is
                > -> fine, I have access to the www from both and when I
ping from one to the
                > -> other I can get a connection.
                > -> # ping 155.198.91.168
                > -> PING 155.198.91.168 (155.198.91.168) from 155.198.91.82
: 56(84) bytes of
                > -> data.
                > -> 64 bytes from 155.198.91.168 icmp_seq=0 tt164
time=4.2ms
                > -> 64 bytes from 155.198.91.168 icmp_seq=0 tt164
time=4.2ms
                > -> ...
                > -> However, when I directly connect the two network cards
with one cable, the
                > -> connection is not established, i.e.
                > -> # ping 155.198.91.168
                > -> PING 155.198.91.168 (155.198.91.168) 56 bytes of data.
                > -> 
                > -> and nothing else. What am I missing?
                > 
                > Possibly what you are missing is that you need a different
kind of cable
                > to go directly from computer to computer.
                > 
                > To go from a computer to a hub (the normal sort of
connection) you need a
                > cable that is straight through: pin 1 to pin 1, etc.
                > 
                > To go from computer to computer, or hub to hub, you need a
cable which has
                > wires crossed over in it, i.e. any given pin is not
necessarily wired to
                > its opposite number. This type of cable is known by
various names,
                > including "hub to hub" and "crossover".
                > 
                > I would suggest you buy an eight port 10/100BT hub; they
are only about
                > $100 these days. If you want to plug back into the college
net, get an IP
                > address for each machine and plug the cable to the network
switch into the
                > uplink port of your hub. Or look at IP masquerading.
                > 
                > 
                > -- 
                > 
                >               -- C^2
                > 
                > No windows were crashed in the making of this email.
                > 
                > Looking for fine software and/or web pages?
                > http://w3.trib.com/~ccurley
                > 

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