Re: Back again with funny network interfaces

2007-04-20 Thread mickey
On Fri, Apr 20, 2007 at 06:16:32AM -0700, Manuel Ravasio wrote: I have a doubt... PCMCIA ethernet interface cannot negotiate more than 10Mbps, ignoring my trials to force 100full... PCMCIA wireless interface doesn't run at more than 11Mbps, ignoring my trials to force 54Mbps... Maybe

Re: Back again with funny network interfaces

2007-04-20 Thread Paul de Weerd
On Fri, Apr 20, 2007 at 06:16:32AM -0700, Manuel Ravasio wrote: | I have a doubt... | | PCMCIA ethernet interface cannot negotiate more than 10Mbps, ignoring my | trials to force 100full... | PCMCIA wireless interface doesn't run at more than 11Mbps, ignoring my trials | to force 54Mbps... | |

Re: Back again with funny network interfaces

2007-04-20 Thread Marc Balmer
mickey wrote: Maybe it's something with old PCMCIA cardbus? pcmcia cardbus is an oxymoron. pcmcia is a 16bit isa-like bus w/ 3.3v and 5v power. cardbus is a pci-like 32bit bus w/ 3.3v power only. pccard is a form factor for this devices also. people can't memorize computer industries

Re: Back again with funny network interfaces

2007-04-20 Thread Manuel Ravasio
I have a doubt... PCMCIA ethernet interface cannot negotiate more than 10Mbps, ignoring my trials to force 100full... PCMCIA wireless interface doesn't run at more than 11Mbps, ignoring my trials to force 54Mbps... Maybe it's something with old PCMCIA cardbus? Bud Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail

Re: Back again with funny network interfaces

2007-04-20 Thread Timo Schoeler
Maybe it's something with old PCMCIA cardbus? pcmcia cardbus is an oxymoron. pcmcia is a 16bit isa-like bus w/ 3.3v and 5v power. cardbus is a pci-like 32bit bus w/ 3.3v power only. pccard is a form factor for this devices also. people can't memorize computer industries

Re: Back again with funny network interfaces

2007-04-20 Thread Manuel Ravasio
pcmcia cardbus is an oxymoron. Whoops... Something like childproof and CiscoWorks? :-) pcmcia is a 16bit isa-like bus w/ 3.3v and 5v power. cardbus is a pci-like 32bit bus w/ 3.3v power only. pccard is a form factor for this devices also. Hmmm... I have something that looks like a couple of

Re: Back again with funny network interfaces

2007-04-20 Thread Andy Hayward
On 4/20/07, Manuel Ravasio [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I have something that looks like a couple of pcmcia cards, which fit into two pcmcia slots... I don't have a tester at home, so I can't check voltages. PCMCIA and CardBus cards are physically (very slightly) different:

Re: Back again with funny network interfaces

2007-04-20 Thread mickey
On Fri, Apr 20, 2007 at 08:10:10AM -0700, Manuel Ravasio wrote: pcmcia cardbus is an oxymoron. Whoops... Something like childproof and CiscoWorks? :-) pcmcia is a 16bit isa-like bus w/ 3.3v and 5v power. cardbus is a pci-like 32bit bus w/ 3.3v power only. pccard is a form factor for

Re: Back again with funny network interfaces

2007-04-19 Thread Manuel Ravasio
If you hard set one side of an Ethernet link it disables the auto negotiation pulse so the other side defaults to 10baseT half duplex. I would suggest using media autoselect or media 10baseT unless you can configure the port on the switch. The switch is actually a 8-port 10/100 hub/switch,

Re: Back again with funny network interfaces

2007-04-18 Thread Dustin Lundquist
Manuel Ravasio wrote: A friend of mine gave me a pcmcia card with no recognizable brand/model on it. I plugged it in and OpenBSD told me it's a Realtek 8139 card, and called it rl0. I can use the card, but apparently it works at 10Mbps instead of 100. I tried to force the card's speed and duplex