I've been toying with that myself.  One solution I found was running multiple SOCKS5 
servers and then using the HUMMINGBIRD SOCKS5 Client and enable balancing on it.  I 
haven't actually done it myself yet, but it may work.  (It does in theory as long as 
you can get a socks5 server for each modem)

Joe Tennies

-----Original Message-----
From:   John Krivitsky [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent:   Wednesday, November 03, 1999 2:16 AM
To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        Multiple modems without eql?

There are a few docs on how to do load balancing between two machines
that run load balancing protocols, but does anybody know of a way of
performing a sort of equivalent when connecting to a remote that doesn't
support the protocol, or even to two different remote-ends?

The application is for a group of people to access the Internet via a
single dial-out box that holds multiple modems. The goal is to connect a
larger number of users through the modems - doesn't matter that any one
user still only has the maximum bandwidth that a single modem allows.

In other words, say there are 9 people and 3 modems. It might mean that,
on average, a single person is sharing the modem with 2 others, not with
8 others.

Any ideas?

        Thanks!

                jk

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