On Mon, 25 Jun 2001, Reckhard, Tobias wrote:
> How can it be ACK SYN ACK, when there is only one ACK bit in the TCP
> header?
I first heard the term "ACK SYN ACK" during a lecture on a Networking
Techniques and Protocols course at the university and I believe it was
just meant to differentiate the third packet from the second packet (I
know the lecturer could've used other ways, putting more emphasis on the
sequence numbers or something such) and, it kinda took in *shrug*.
Anyway, this is getting OT so I'll stop here.
.pi.
--
Petteri Lyytinen + [EMAIL PROTECTED] + http://www.cs.tut.fi/~typo/
"Close friends are the true angels who lift you up on your feet when
your wings don't remember how to fly."
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