Get em a litter box, he'll keep mice away.
At 04:23 PM 12/7/2009, you wrote:
So, I get to the workshop this afternoon, and walk in.There's a cat on
my chair.I have NO idea how he got in, other than he must have dashed
through the door as I walked in or out. I specifically made sure he
it will make
a ton of illegal links and be a waste of RF spectrum.
On Tue, Dec 8, 2009 at 7:48 PM, Mike Hammett wispawirel...@ics-il.net
wrote:
http://www.electronista.com/articles/09/12/07/80211ac.process.underway/
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com
This little historical item says a lot about this subject.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fRdLpem-AAs
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sell my service. I've tried explaining, but
the task bar tells all, right?
Mike G
At 08:30 AM 12/9/2009, Mike Hammett wrote:
In 5 GHz (the home of 802.11a) there are a few hundred MHz available. All
the home routers really should be in 5 GHz
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Mike
Sent: Wednesday, December 09, 2009 9:21 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Wi-Fi to top 1 GB/s by 2012
I agree! However, most of the newer laptops don't have 802.11a
? Are you hanging and
freezing deer sausage on that cloths line?
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Mike
Sent: Wednesday, December 09, 2009 9:16 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Wind!
I just tried digging out a path
Call me when you do. We can meet up if you like.
Mike
At 12:03 PM 12/9/2009, you wrote:
And the wonder pole is now ice
Say it isn't so! I gotta go out to cedar rapids in a week or so. That
sucks!
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun
List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Wind!
So much for global warming! Oops, another hot topic these days!
On Wed, Dec 9, 2009 at 12:15 PM, Mike m...@aweiowa.com wrote:
I just tried digging out a path for the animals to go back outside. It's
fruitless. I have 4 and 5 foot drifts and the wind is gusting
I'm not sure how this storm is affecting my fellow midwest WISP
friends, but it is turning into an epic event here. Snow has drifted
above the windows on a couple sides of the house. Winds are 35 mph
sustained gusting to 50. It is still snowing, and we've had 14 - 16
inches of snow.
It's
One of the short farm jacks might be easier to work on the
tower. I have one of the long HiLift jacks I use for all sorts of
things. That would be easy to gin pole to a lower section and use
it without the base.
At 04:36 PM 12/9/2009, you wrote:
Ya know, I thought about an old scissor jack.
] On
Behalf Of Mike
Sent: Wednesday, December 09, 2009 3:34 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: [WISPA] an epic storm
I'm not sure how this storm is affecting my fellow midwest WISP
friends, but it is turning into an epic event here. Snow has drifted
above the windows on a couple sides of the house
24 volts won't kill you. 25 volts will; with enough current. :-)
At 10:00 PM 12/9/2009, you wrote:
By low, I was talking about 24 volts. I know the electric company calls 120
volts. My point was I'm not taking a bucket near any electrical power lines,
period. Thanks!
On Wed, Dec 9, 2009 at
Oh yes they did. Try to buy John Deere green paint; you pay a
premium. They absolutely maintain control on marketing of the green, Deere.
At 09:05 AM 12/10/2009, you wrote:
I really don't think you can do that. I seem to remember that John Deere
tried it and failed.
Regards,
Jeff
Jeff
: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Mike Hammett
Sent: Friday, December 11, 2009 9:17 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Report: Broadband stimulus funds won't suffice
A lot of organizations only consider fiber worthy of deployment going
Is that saying any antenna with less than 30dBi gain is within the
rules? Have they relaxed the rules on certification? Just curious.
At 12:04 PM 12/15/2009, Matt wrote:
According to Ubiquiti themselves and the FCC:
This equipment is required to be professionally installed
The device has
Oh, and I was giving you credit for quoting from Hitchikers Guide to
the Galaxy, where 42 was the answer to the Universal Question.
mg
At 04:11 PM 12/16/2009, you wrote:
I read an interesting thing the other day concerning that. As proof that
you can use numbers to come to any conclusion that
I like the hand warmer idea. I see em for less than a buck per
regularly. Thanks for the tip.
mg
At 02:01 PM 12/17/2009, you wrote:
Yeah, you are an id10t! Yikes.
It's only internet guys! NO ONE IS GONNA DIE if it doesn't work. Oh, they
act like they will, but they wont.
Safety first,
I was almost ready to pull the trigger on some Ubiquiti equipment for
a new project. The scent of low price is alluring. Then I start
reading about connectors pulling out, connectors not soldered on
properly, and the wrong boot code on boards.
Is it too early? Should I wait a bit before I
amazed at
how well they preformed for the price. I have read all the horror
stories in the UBNT forums but have yet to have one problem. Probably
just cursed myself and should of kept my mouth shut. But so far so
good.
On Sat 12/19/09 6:35 AM , Mike m...@aweiowa.com sent:
I was almost
I think he meant prawn, which is shrimp. I just recently joined DAM;
Mother's Against Dyslexia.
At 08:51 AM 12/24/2009, you wrote:
I'm no able to get my pron at all. I think they have a pron block in my
area.
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org
Check out DigitalLoggers: http://www.digital-loggers.com/din.html
They have some cool devices. I use them at tower sites and can
reboot individual devices. The DIN relays might work for you. I use
the web switches a couple places.
Mike
At 08:24 PM 12/24/2009, you wrote:
I'm hoping
!
Mike
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http
The Andrew way has always been wide mastic/coax seal/good electrical tape.
The mastic keeps the coax seal out of the threads
The coax seal seals
The electrical tape protects the coax seal
Always wrap like you're roofing; bottom up.
Mike
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun
, and is
estimated to have been an 8 on the scale, or 10 times more powerful than the
Haitian one yesterday. The New Madrid quake was 199 years ago this month,
or the same time frame as the last big quake in Haiti.
Mike
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun
Absolutely not true with the RED Cross. You get a big bang for your buck,
and they are always the first to respond with relief, know what they're
doing, and do it well.
At redcross.org you can even use Amazon payments to get your donation on the
way.
Do it, it'll make you feel good.
Mike
of the St. Petersburg soup kitchen. According to your site,
over 90% of Red Cross funds go right to the cause, quickly, efficiently.
Why debate, just give. Give blood while you're at it too. The Red Cross
does that well too.
Mike
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org
Just going through some extra gear, we picked up from a recent aquisition, have
an assortment of Tranzeo 2.4's/5.8's and Trango 900 AP/SU's and TenX radios. We
are going to put this stuff up on ebay soon (or bin it), we have tested it and
verified it's functioning, if someone is interested
We've got to purchase some PDU/UPS for new locations, I'm looking to
standardize on something into the future. I'd prefer a combo PDU/UPS device
with 8 ports providing surge/conditioning, remotely accessable via IP and
something that can stand the rough Michigan weather conditions. I've looked
We've just installed a 3 sector 2.4 setup, at 145' with maxrad 120's. I'm
noticing the receive sensitivity on the AP's are about 15-20 db's different
then what I see on the CPE's, tried a Tranzeo/Ubiquity radio. I'm using
Ubiquity AP's, and they work fine on another 3 sector setup I have,
Yea, can't try that until Monday though. Was just sort of wondering if improper
isolation would cause the issue I'm seeing, or if I need to keep looking for
something else.
Regards
Michael Baird
- Original Message -
From: Bob Moldashel lakel...@gbcx.net
To: WISPA General List
Looking for a good MT vendor. The fellow I've been trying to work
with has gone AWOL. I need to get a link going for a community
project pretty quickly.
Regards,
Mike
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
http
Oops! Forgot to change the subject.
Looking for a good MT vendor. The fellow I've been trying to work
with has gone AWOL. I need to get a link going for a community
project pretty quickly.
Regards,
Mike
,
Mike Gilchrist
Disruptive Technologist
Advanced Wireless Express
P.O. Box 255
Toledo, IA 52342
239-770-6203
At 05:40 PM 7/20/2009, you wrote:
Try Dennis Burgess from www.linktechs.net
One of the best!
Victoria Proffer - President/CEO
StLouisBroadband.com http://stlbroadband.com/
314.974.5600
, or just tell the customer it
won't work if you are trying to reach that distance with an AP to SM.
Mike
At 07:01 PM 7/30/2009, you wrote:
Any chance it could do 30 to 40 miles from ap to cpe with that setup?
Jason
Gino Villarini wrote:
Charles
Actually now it's FCC certified with the low power
But NOT with Canopy, right?
At 10:25 AM 7/31/2009, you wrote:
We have 29 mile ptmp links that will deliver 6Mbps x 3Mbps without a problem.
Travis
Microserv
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1 1/2 at the smallest.
What are you guys using as a pipe mount in such a situation? Is
there something I could use I could buy locally?
Thanks,
Mike
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
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When I search there for pipe to pipe, I only get hits for ice bridge hardware.
At 01:30 PM 8/3/2009, you wrote:
Pipe to pipe mount
This will allow you to mount to the leg and add a larger pipe to
mount the dish.
www.sitepro1.com
...
I too disagree on the electrical tape. An old installer taught me
that 9 - 12 lengths of insulated solid #8 wire makes great bundle
ties. Before the climb, he cuts a bunch of them to length, stuffs
them in his pouch. On the way back down, every five feet or so he
will take the wire around
; grain bins, rural
water towers etc ... It's the fastest growing wireless network I've
ever seen, and all but trashes 900 MHz.
Mike
At 10:17 AM 8/6/2009, you wrote:
Most of my tranzeo AP's have had to be replaced due to similar things. They
started out good, but as people have done more
in the midwest they are uncommon.
This may not be the case with your link, but is worth learning
about. Here is a nice site for tropo
predictions. http://www.dxinfocentre.com/tropo_car.html
Mike
At 10:33 PM 8/7/2009, you wrote:
So, what causes this crazy loss on all of my 'longer' 5.8 links after
At 08:18 AM 8/8/2009, you wrote:
Likely to be scintillation.
Could be, but in my experience, scintillation is more of a factor mid day.
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
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Scintillation, for our purposes, is similar to when you see a mirage
on a highway in front of you, usually on a hot day, and not uncommon
across deserts. The wavering of the light waves is the same thing
that happens to radio signals, more-or-less.
I once had a canopy, with dish mounted on a
] On
Behalf Of Mike
Sent: Saturday, August 08, 2009 1:05 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] 5.8GHz Link Loss
Scintillation, for our purposes, is similar to when you see a mirage on a
highway in front of you, usually on a hot day, and not uncommon across
deserts. The wavering
On long links the information could help you explain some
anomalies. From an engineering point of view space diversity is the
best way to cope with tropospheric ducting. To a lesser extent,
frequency diversity can help maintain a long link since different
frequencies are affected slightly
are it may be Rayleigh fading, or Rician
fading if the path is over trees and such.
Did someone else show up and start shooting across your path,
especially at mid path?
There is a wealth of knowledge on this list, but we still need some more info.
Did all of the 3? paths degrade similarly?
Mike
BECAUSE of the long duration back-up users.
Without the Netequalizer, just a few of these users would bring my
network to its knees.
I am beginning to think Mosy and their ilk belong in the same camp as
Netflix and the P2Pers.
Mike
At 05:51 AM 8/13/2009, you wrote:
Mike wrote:
Seems wrong too
on the board, but wondered if there was a better way.
Mike
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WISPA Wireless List
Where is the telephone demark. Access? You're a CLEC, put a small
DSLAM in there; Zhone? Or consider Ethernet over power
line. Apartment complexes of any size can get really ugly with RF in
a hurry. Wireless absolutely? I don't know about the Meraki
hardware mentioned, but seem to
Early Saturday morning and playing catch-up with the list since we
took our daughter to college yesterday. I had to look at my cell
phone, which by-the-way woke me up a few minutes ago because a router
down message was coming in from my upstream provider, to see what day
it was. Reading all
Ran into the Citrix problem a long time ago. Most data programs are
sensitive to dropped packets. The problem with Citrix is that the
packets were small. The program was written to work as a database
across a local area network. Once WANs became common and the
databases were centralized I
If this was one of your remote sites and you suspected virus
activity, would you put a sniffer on the AP? How and with what would
you analyze the problem? What's the best way to be alert to such happenings?
At 08:26 AM 8/24/2009, you wrote:
Sounds like you have one or more infected customers
://www.rfparts.com/dummy.html
Mike
At 04:10 PM 8/24/2009, you wrote:
For bench purposes, how hard is it to build antenna loads for the
bench. I hate having to hook up a antenna, LMR and Pigtail every
time I test a radio. I am pretty new to this Building my own stuff
and not buying
way to do it, but it works.
Mike
At 11:09 PM 8/24/2009, you wrote:
Hi All,
Sorry for the cross post. Time is short on this project and I need a lot of
help.
I've never done a solar project. Never really even looked at them due to
the costs I've seen tossed about.
Now I have a customer that's
I was shocked to find the 15W panels at Northern for $79.00. I
ordered some and they work great. You need a charge controller,
$45.00 to keep the batteries from over charging. You have to get
creative with uni-strut and angle iron to make your own mount, or buy
them. Batteries are the
I am going to plant a 60 foot pole on a fellow's farm. The plan is
to light up a river valley which can't get fast Internet. Does
anyone have a friendly agreement they've used and would share?
Thanks,
Mike
back.
Mike
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for site surveys on occasion.
Both radios pull less than an Amp total and the system supplies 2.5
Amp in good sun. The 800 Amp hour battery will run it for 800 hours?
Mike
At 08:04 PM 8/25/2009, you wrote:
Interesting. What radios are you powering this with?
Scottie
-- Original Message
http://www.wonderpole.com/wp640_630.html
I have had very good service from this device. Don't over-tighten
the section rings in the field unless you have a pair of channel
locks with you. Don't ask me how I know that.
At 01:59 AM 8/26/2009, you wrote:
Wonder Pole?
Please tell me more!
Mike
been reluctant to put signs on it though, for obvious reasons.
(people already think I am toting a rocket launcher) LOL
Ralph
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Mike
Sent: Tuesday, August 25, 2009 10:57 PM
To: sarn...@info
Of Mike
Sent: Wednesday, August 26, 2009 5:40 AM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] solar site
I'd love to add that to my trailer. What is the make?
At 11:36 PM 8/25/2009, you wrote:
That sounds like great public service and a way to get recognized too!
If you want
://www.homedepot.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?storeId=10051langId=-1catalogId=10053productId=100658288
Mike wrote:
It depends on how high you push it up. I *HAVE* had it all the way
up with a 12 panel, low wind condition, one person on the ground and
the other sitting on the gable end
'splain please! How is that configured? Thanks.
At 10:50 AM 8/27/2009, you wrote:
... We now mount 2 pieces of 1-5/8
Unistrut with 1/4 lags and clamp the pipe to it.
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
radios is insignificant, and not some 200' run.
Hams, geeks and wisp owners are cut from similar cloth.
Mike
WISPA Wants You! Join today!
http://signup.wispa.org
That's one point I was making with my fuzzy math repeater
example. :-) I think the Wili card radios in that repeater system
will operate down to 7V.
I may need more than toys if I tried to use legacy 48V stuff and the
resultant voltage conversions.
At 10:08 AM 8/29/2009, you wrote:
The best
?
Friendly Regards,
Mike
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Couldn't you run a bridge computer with something like Untangle
running to see what the traffic contains at the tower site? I've
never run Untangle, but have considered setting up such a device to
put at a troublesome node for analysis. Thoughts?
Mike
At 07:41 AM 9/2/2009, you wrote
Was it Prodigy, AOL or Gore who invented the Internet? Or was it
Compuserve? Man we've come a long ways since ALL of those.
At 10:53 AM 9/3/2009, you wrote:
I guess it depends on your definition of Internet. The ARPANET model
doesn't really show what we have today.
For me it's about TCP/IP,
I'm curious if anybody has explored using circular polarization at
900 MHz for some of the reasons posted in this thread?
At 10:42 AM 9/3/2009, you wrote:
Lol, and the answer is because horizontal usually has less noise.
Whcih has nothing to do with the size of the wave cycle. Unless
someone
Cordless phones, baby monitors, PAGING SYSTEMS, and the bane for
rural Iowa users is the new GPS positioning systems on every big
farmer's tractor. They make 900 MHz worthless even with filters;
they use the entire allotment. Telemetry, talking refrigerators, and
other consumer devices also
Curious if you blew any water out of the low end of the cat5? I
had a similar thing happen one time. It was atmospheric pumping
caused by pressure changes; at least that was the theory.
At 06:18 PM 9/5/2009, you wrote:
Believe me, I tried replacing the end connectors before rerunning the
And the Wireless Internet antenna is a discone. Unity gain,
omnidirectional. It looks more like a scanner antenna or multiband
close comm antenna.
At 10:31 PM 9/6/2009, you wrote:
It should be clear, I posted that link with no thought to
politics, it was simply to show our troops in action
thought about doing this or is doing this? You could
squeeze a couple more sectors on a tower if this is possible.
Mike
At 08:36 AM 9/9/2009, you wrote:
I believe you can but you'll need to use the CLI
Int wireless set wlan1 frequency=2406
On 9/9/09, Mike m...@aweiowa.com wrote:
I have
device. I would however buy one for the AP. It may steer me away
from using MT for these customer sites IF I decide to try this.
Mike
***
Good idea, but it won't let me. I receive this message:
message=bad band and/or channel, see 'wireless info' for supported
stuff go anyway?
Mike
At 02:08 PM 9/9/2009, you wrote:
Be Careful!! Selecting another Country Code is unwise if you are
going to operate near the band edges because of spurs (spurious emissions).
Here's an explanation.
A 20-MHz (or 10 MHz or 5 MHz) channel is really more than 20 MHz (or
10
I'm not sure which Ethernet surge protection I'd recommend, but
PolyPhaser does it best, in my opinion, for RF.
At 10:51 PM 9/16/2009, you wrote:
Hello all,
I am part of a group installing a wireless network in rural Honduras
for a growing educational system with a chapter of Engineers Without
Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of RickG
Sent: Sunday, September 20, 2009 8:40 PM
To: WISPA General List
Subject: Re: [WISPA] Router suggestions
http://www.edimax.us/
EW-7207APg
-RickG
On Sun, Sep 20, 2009 at 5:35 PM, Mike Hammett wispawirel
, Sep 20, 2009 at 4:11 PM, Mike Hammett
wispawirel...@ics-il.netwrote:
Something like 80% of the time I've been to a network had Linksys, it's
been
broken.
-
Mike Hammett
Intelligent Computing Solutions
http://www.ics-il.com
telling ATT what to do. STOP protecting my Free
Speech right now!!!.
Mike Hammett wrote:
What I don't like about it is another case of the government telling me
what to do. More regulations is less freedom. If someone doesn't like the
way ISP
WTF? I hope you're not smoking that sh1t!
At 10:28 AM 9/23/2009, you wrote:
Never heard of such a thing.
This is very interesting:
http://www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message519074/pg1
On Tue, Sep 22, 2009 at 9:55 PM, Robert West
robert.w...@just-micro.comwrote:
Anyone else tired of
... and a flashing light hooked to a Digital Loggers switch on the
tower for sunset site surveys. :-)
a
light:
http://www.northerntool.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/product_6970_200365214_200365214
a 24 volt power supply:
!) an anomaly of some sort
2) the apple doesn't fall far from the tree
3) she FOUND boys in a big way
4) all of the above
I pick 4) all of the above. If you read Verizon's TOS, text messages
are not guaranteed to be delivered, take the least cost path, and
might arrive well after they are
Multipath and/or scintillation. It looks like the sun is shining and
65 degrees in Salem. Sun beating on that metal surface can cause
heat waves to rise in front of the antenna causing
scintillation. Sometimes this stuff is black magic and moving a CPE
a couple feet one way or another can
Agreed. Planes flying through the Fresnel zone will have more of an
impact on B type modulation than on say G. You might see selective
fading because of multipath, but OFDM or some other robust modulation
technique will recover from an aircraft on approach at 250 mph flying
through the
The Atheros Deliberant cards will do half and quarter channels on G.
At 10:42 AM 10/1/2009, you wrote:
If you aren't sectorized, you should do that first.
Neither normal b or g or b/g are ideal in high noise. I don't mix.
I like a little better g-mode on 10mhz channels using radio cards that
Yeah, I think they use the same cards -- Willi Atheros. Goota set
IEEE mode to G first, then half/quarter channels are available.
At 11:04 AM 10/1/2009, you wrote:
Mike - you mean 5mhz and 10mhz channels?
Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH
* Redundant PtP bridge with STP
At 11:37 AM 10/1/2009, you wrote:
Yeah, I think they use the same cards -- Willi Atheros. Goota set
IEEE mode to G first, then half/quarter channels are available.
At 11:04 AM 10/1/2009, you wrote:
Mike - you mean 5mhz and 10mhz channels?
Josh Luthman
You don't say if you are using 5Mhz or 10MHz channels. I assume 10
with 40 customers.
With the smaller bandwidth and slower speeds I think fractional
channels limit the number of subscribers you can put on an AP. Does
anybody have any empirical data on the number of users that can use a
5MHz
We get a capital fee up front that covers most of the equipment
charges. It was harder a few years ago with $380.00 radios, but like
most electronic stuff they keep getting better and cheaper. Soon
they will just be giving them to us. :-)
At 06:49 PM 10/1/2009, you wrote:
Like I said, we
I built one of the very first Canopy networks back in 2002. Joe
Schneider even sat at my desk and helped configure the first
cluster. We even helped them iron out some problems with the early
CMM. Ken Magro was near the top of my speed dial list.
The only serious competition at the time was
live wireless and free
enterprise!
Mike
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WISPA Wireless List: wireless@wispa.org
I have a couple XBOX 360 players saying they are having lag
issues. It seems a low bandwidth consumer. How are you guys
optimizing for them? I'd like to try and make them happier. Is there
a down side?
I know Marlon asked last winter but a good answer never appeared on the list.
Thanks
Huh? How does that help?
At 10:52 PM 10/4/2009, you wrote:
As my father told me, a poor workman blames his tools.
. . . J o n a t h a n
-Original Message-
From: wireless-boun...@wispa.org [mailto:wireless-boun...@wispa.org] On
Behalf Of Mike
Sent: Sunday, October 04, 2009 9:41 PM
up.
Have you set up QOS queues for XBox?
Mike
At 10:15 PM 10/4/2009, you wrote:
What kind of network topology do you have between your head end and their
Xbox? Two or more layers of NAT, from what I read, bother the Xbox.
What kind of bandwidth does he get after a speed test? Xbox uses a lot
can also contribute. Lend the customer a different
router and see if that helps.
On Mon, Oct 05, 2009 at 06:18:57AM -0500, Mike wrote:
They ARE behind a double nat. They are a rural pocket of family I
feed with a sector, then have a repeater on one of the buildings. I
put a robust client
double nat can cause a problem for that sometimes. A low quality
home firewall/router can also contribute. Lend the customer a different
router and see if that helps.
On Mon, Oct 05, 2009 at 06:18:57AM -0500, Mike wrote:
They ARE behind a double nat. They are a rural pocket of family I
feed
of users to see if
it's the server or not.
I guess I never knew the servers were out in other users homes, kinda
like P2P or a sort of distributed computing? I guess I thought the
Xbox live servers were centrally located.
Mike
At 09:02 AM 10/5/2009, you wrote:
The only issue we have with Xbox
improbable, must be the truth.
--- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
On Mon, Oct 5, 2009 at 11:53 AM, Jeremy Parr jeremyp...@gmail.com wrote:
2009/10/5 David E. Smith d...@mvn.net:
Mike Hammett wrote:
I miss it back in the day when game servers were centrally hosted.
These things, like many
setting you really HAVE to do is
set your trunk up and trunk down. It is a nice device and will keep
you from having to buy more bandwidth. It just makes everybody play
fair in an agnostic sort of way.
Mike
At 09:53 PM 10/6/2009, you wrote:
Anyone running a NetEqualizer? I set one up
I keep a browser open with three windows on the monitoring machine:
http://192.168.100.2:3000/thptStats.html (change your ip. It
updates automatically. I zoom it to see 3 graphs)
http://192.168.100.2/cgi-bin/arbi/doGetbrain.cgi (I hit refresh when
I want to see connections)
of doing DHCP and
NAT at your AP's).
Mike
At 10:36 PM 10/6/2009, you wrote:
Mike-
Thanks - I have a feeling something is still wrong, the connection
count is just too low - there are 10's of 1,000s of connections on
our network and this thing is only showing 120 or so at a
time. Investigating
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