Douglas D Germann Sr wrote:
<<Nanni X <nannix <at> nodalis.it> writes:

Hi Douglas,
what do you think about a switch (or hub, of course) failure?
Did you test the low level connection? Perhaps you can start with a ping from w95 to any other station and vice versa.

Let me know

NanniX

Nanni--

Thanks, Nanni!

Switch or hub failure. That is interesting. I am having trouble connecting (from
any station) to pop.compuserve.com to collect my POP3 e-mail, and have been trouble shooting that for a couple of weeks. The problem there is that I can connect to compuserve and get my e-mail just fine if I remove the *router* (Linksys WRT54G), but not with the router in place.

But if we can ping from any station to any station (which we can), that goes through the switch I have, right? (A Linksys EZXS16W) And all stations (except that one) are able to browse the Web.

Sorry, I don't know what a "low level connection" is. I'll try it if you tell me
 what it is. <grin>

Thanks, Nanni!

:- Doug.


I'm wondering at this point about the difference in the handling of DNS/WINS between Win95 and WinXP. Normally, XP is the fussier of the two, but ...

With a separate switch and router, and a router normally providing DNS services, perhaps you are having a problem in that area. You can ping google, presumably from the name and not the ip address, so your DNS is likely working.

It appears your switch is working. You can ping between stations OK.

You may need WINS services running to get Win95 to connect to Samba properly. That's what I'd concentrate on.
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