I believe the Netgear rt328 is an OEM product from Zyxel
http://www.zyxel.com. I've used Combinet (now Cisco) and Ascend. The
Zyxel box is by far the easiest to configure. It's especially good for
connecting to multiple sites and masquerading as different IP addresses
on different connections.
Hello,
I need advice on what ISDN adapter to get.
I have looked at the:
3comImpact IQ (serial) modem external device..
But am concerned about the limit of 115K speed on the serial port.
And people say its just a toy..not a solid ISDN choice..(250.00 cost too)
I have also looked at the:
Cisco
George Bonser wrote:
On Sun, 25 Oct 1998, Steven Udell wrote:
Hello,
I need advice on what ISDN adapter to get.
Before you lay out a bunch of money for ISDN, is ADSL coming to your area
any time soon? It kicks ISDN to the curb. No special line installation, no
additional line
George Bonser wrote:
On Sun, 25 Oct 1998, Steven Udell wrote:
Yea..and no..I am too far from the telco's switching building.
1000 Meters too far for ADSL..already cursed alot about this g
ISDN is where I am headed...
I'll read on.. just replying to the ADSL part...
We have had
On Sun, 25 Oct 1998 20:11:44 -0800 (PST), George Bonser wrote:
We have had good luck at work with Ascend ISDN equipment. If you are on
metered ISDN (as opposed to Centrex ISDN) make sure you program that thing
Could you please explain to a German user what the difference between metered
ISDN
If you choose the ISDN router take a look at the Symplex RO-1:
www.symplex.com
Works well for me on Debian, Redhat SuSE boxes. All are
networked through an ethernet switch and connected to the
outside world via the Symplex RO-1 (even have a couple of
WindowsNT boxes on the network using
Ok... ok...
Here is my $0.02 ...( two cents for non american speaking users, meaning a
piece of my mind -in liberal paraphrase.)
ISDN router is my vote. This way it's not tied to any specific
machine.Linux, unix, win 95 and NT as long as they have ethernet they'll
use it.
Can I recommend one?
I have had great luck with the Netgear RT328. It is cheap ($280) and it is a
fully
functional router. This one has one ethernet interface and the next model up
has a
four port hub built in. No messing around with kernel tweaking, or installing
an
internal card, you just configure it over
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