Do you anything more about the exact nature of the problem? Thing is, from the little I've read the switch should be able to tell that the card doesn't autonegotiate and switch to the lower speed. Is there something specifically funky with asante products that doesn't work with that?
On Jan 17, 2:34 pm, Clark Martin <[email protected]> wrote: > On 1/17/10 4:07 AM, hartonj wrote: > > > The thing is that my switch works with the Apple AAUI Transciever > > which will only work at 10mbps. So, I'm not sure why this wouldn't > > work. > > Because the Apple AAUI Transceiver doesn't have the auto-negotiation > problem and Asante devices do. > > > > > On Jan 17, 12:41 am, Gregg Eshelman<[email protected]> wrote: > >> Yup, since most network cards for 68k Macs predate 100 megabit > >> ethernet, most of them don't properly identify themselves as being > >> capable of only 10 megabit, half duplex. Asante brand cards are > >> especially known for that problem. > > Asante is the only brand I've run into the problem with. > > > > >> Better 10/100 hubs/switches/routers can handle that, but some rely > >> solely on the NICs in the computers properly using media > >> identification. > > >> The solution is to get any 10 megabit hub and daisy chain it > >> between your old Mac and your 10/100 box. > > Try this. > > -- > Clark Martin > Redwood City, CA, USA > Macintosh / Internet Consulting > > "I'm a designated driver on the Information Super Highway"
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