Andy Medina wrote:
On Sat, 18 Mar 2006, Pete Holsberg wrote:

Obviously, this is not the only way to set up an Internet connection (DSL, in my case) but as I do not have one of these in my Control Panel > Network Connections folder, I was wondering where the information he uses is used in my set-up. That is, when I boot-up, what logs me in to Verizon, how does it know to use PPoE, etc.?

A PPoE connection is considered a "dial-up" connection. That is you have to run the connectoid in order to connect to Verizon. Once connected, it will log in using the user name and password provided when the connectoid was created. As far as knowing to use PPoE, that is the type of connection that was created, so it can not use any other connection type. IOW the connectoid was specifically created as a PPoE connection, not a Slip or PPP connection for instance.

If you want the connectoid to connect to Verizon at bootup, the connectoid shortcut would have to be placed in the startup folder. The "Dial whenever a network connection is not present" or "Always dial my default connection" options can also be used.

If you look at the connection properties of a PPoE connection, it looks very similar to the connection properties of a modem connection.

That's what I gathered from the fellow's website.

So the question is, when does one need to use PPoE and when does one use (what 
would you call the other kind of connection?)?

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