Matthew Toseland ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
The disadvantage is that it can't possibly work because TCP does not
provide a way beyond the most crude imaginable to tell the other end to
use a given bandwidth.
That's irrelevant. My download speed is twice my upload speed, and I
consider that a
Quoting Matthew Toseland [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 07:41:06PM -0700, NoSpam wrote:
At 05:31 PM 10/28/2002, you wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Pardon me if this is a stupid question, but I've been fighting Freenet
for
the last 45 minutes
At 05:31 PM 10/28/2002, you wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Pardon me if this is a stupid question, but I've been fighting Freenet for
the last 45 minutes trying to figure out exactly how to get at the Freenet
proxy from a different computer. The solutions in the FAQ and
On Tue, Oct 29, 2002 at 07:41:06PM -0700, NoSpam wrote:
At 05:31 PM 10/28/2002, you wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Pardon me if this is a stupid question, but I've been fighting Freenet
for
the last 45 minutes trying to figure out exactly how to get at the
Freenet
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Pardon me if this is a stupid question, but I've been fighting Freenet for
the last 45 minutes trying to figure out exactly how to get at the Freenet
proxy from a different computer. The solutions in the FAQ and Questions
Answers on the web site
On Mon, Oct 28, 2002 at 07:31:14PM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
Pardon me if this is a stupid question, but I've been fighting Freenet for
the last 45 minutes trying to figure out exactly how to get at the Freenet
proxy from a different
Matthew Toseland ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
BUT this will then count under the bandwidth limiter, i.e. be very very
slow.
I don't use the bandwidth limiters. ;-)
Do we want to count certain IP ranges as local and not limit them,
or do we want to never limit mainport connections, or what?