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TGB! 06-06-2004 11:59 AM

MORE COMPUTER CHAOS!!!!
 
Right, networking was one of those things I never figured I'd need to learn about. But now the time has come, I purchases a ThinkPad but it wasnt the model with the combo card (which wouldnt let me be mobile anyway), and so right now I need to get a Router and a Pcmcia wireless card. But I am quite the cheap little man, and want to get the best deal. So what I need to know is whats the bare minimum I should be looking for in a router/wireless card.

For the router it doesnt need to be wireless since I have pretty lengthy CAT-5 cables that are working fine for now (modem in living room, this computer in room). So what could I go cheap on. However a guy from Ebay lives in my city and is selling this -

[url=http://www.linksys.com/products/product.asp?prid=173&scid=0:3e5ea]http://www.linksys.com/products/product.asp?prid=173&scid=0[/url:3e5ea]

Good deal for 20 bucks?

As far as wireless cards, again what am I looking for? I see wireless cards that are strictly for sharing internet, but then others that offer to share other networking things like shared HD space, etc. Heres one I'm looking at from FRY's (big computer chain)

[url=http://shop4.outpost.com/product/2975175:3e5ea]http://shop4.outpost.com/product/2975175[/url:3e5ea]

Airborne Butters 06-06-2004 12:51 PM

as much as I hate you, and with a burning passion I do, I'll offer the advice of never getting wireless. I've heard of nothing but problems with the wireless internet routers from freinds. One freind actually had to turn off the sattelite in his room in order to get good connection from the internet.

Duke_of_Ray 06-06-2004 01:02 PM

[quote="Airborne Butters":5a481]as much as I hate you, and with a burning passion I do, I'll offer the advice of never getting wireless. I've heard of nothing but problems with the wireless internet routers from freinds. One freind actually had to turn off the sattelite in his room in order to get good connection from the internet.[/quote:5a481]

Wires were made to be use, lets use the wires in a wire.

TonyMontana 06-06-2004 01:10 PM

i have a wireless network set up, im using a Linksys Wireless Access Point Router 802.11B, which is the same thing that guy is selling for 20$, and the card is good. I havent really had any problems. Nothing in my house has interfered with my connection.

I say go for it

ShagNasty 06-06-2004 01:57 PM

Wireless sucks ass. Cordless phones and microwaves interfere, and we all have them don’t we. Linksys support sucks ass bitches don’t even speak English worth a shit.

TonyMontana 06-06-2004 04:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ShagNasty
Wireless sucks ass. Cordless phones and microwaves interfere, and we all have them don’t we. Linksys support sucks ass bitches don’t even speak English worth a shit.

ur stuff just sucks, as i posted before, ive had no interference problems, i have 2 cordless phones, one in my room where the router is, a microwave, and all other shit. As for tech support, nothing has gone wrong with my stuff, and ive had it for more than 8 months so i havent needed to use it

Mr.Buttocks 06-06-2004 04:09 PM

802.11g rock:

TonyMontana 06-06-2004 04:14 PM

[quote="Mr.Buttocks":4c2f6]802.11g rock:[/quote:4c2f6]

i woulda recommended that, but he only wants the minimum

SoLiDUS 06-06-2004 04:18 PM

[quote="Mr.Buttocks":9dfca]802.11g rock:[/quote:9dfca]

802.11b is more than enough for him. He only needs a realistic throughput
of 2.5-4Mbps for his little home network. Obviously, he doesn't need more
than an 802.11b type Router.

If he plans to upgrade in the future, I suggest purchasing a g-type card and
Router. In terms of security, disable broadcast and enable WEP protection...

TGB! 06-06-2004 04:23 PM

[quote=SoLiDUS][quote="Mr.Buttocks":68a37]802.11g rock:[/quote]

802.11b is more than enough for him. He only needs a realistic throughput
of 2.5-4Mbps for his little home network. Obviously, he doesn't need more
than an 802.11b type Router.

If he plans to upgrade in the future, I suggest purchasing a g-type card and
Router. In terms of security, disable broadcast and enable WEP protection...[/quote:68a37]

Yea looks like I'm going with these two pieces:

[url="http://shop1.outpost.com/product/3999188"]http://shop1.outpost.com/product/3999188[/url]
http://shop1.outpost.com/product/3999228

For that price, and the negative reviews seem to be from peoples setup issues, and not getting sooper-dooper dl speeds are meaningless since I'm not going to use this for more than internet access and being able to get it my files on the desktop.

SoLiDUS 06-06-2004 05:50 PM

Looks fine to me...

Jotun 06-06-2004 11:56 PM

you call that networking?

i recently completed my Cisco case study. we had to set up a 5 computer, 3 router, and one web server LAN, with ACLs for the management computers, subnetting and everything.

we had to calculate the subnets, assign IPs, set up the hosts, web server, wire the routers, configure the routers (ip addresses, host tables, interfaces, clockrates, and the routing protocol was IGRP on AS 1143 and put up the Access Control Lists which were so hard to do.

TGB! 06-07-2004 12:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jotun
you call that networking?

i recently completed my Cisco case study. we had to set up a 5 computer, 3 router, and one web server LAN, with ACLs for the management computers, subnetting and everything.

we had to calculate the subnets, assign IPs, set up the hosts, web server, wire the routers, configure the routers (ip addresses, host tables, interfaces, clockrates, and the routing protocol was IGRP on AS 1143 and put up the Access Control Lists which were so hard to do.

Is that a long-form way of saying youre a virgin? oOo:

SoLiDUS 06-07-2004 12:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jotun
we had to calculate the subnets, assign IPs, set up the hosts, web server, wire the routers, configure the routers (ip addresses, host tables, interfaces, clockrates, and the routing protocol was IGRP on AS 1143 and put up the Access Control Lists which were so hard to do.

*LOL*

No offense, but that was pretty much our final *lab test* and it was a joke.

I alone took care of the subnetting, IP addressing, physical routing and
left the rest to my teammates...

Cisco 1 was on cruise control for me. Did you get your certification, at least ?

Jotun 06-07-2004 03:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SoLiDUS
Quote:

Originally Posted by Jotun
we had to calculate the subnets, assign IPs, set up the hosts, web server, wire the routers, configure the routers (ip addresses, host tables, interfaces, clockrates, and the routing protocol was IGRP on AS 1143 and put up the Access Control Lists which were so hard to do.

*LOL*

No offense, but that was pretty much our final *lab test* and it was a joke.

I alone took care of the subnetting, IP addressing, physical routing and
left the rest to my teammates...

Cisco 1 was on cruise control for me. Did you get your certification, at least ?

of course i did, Cisco is hard as hell to learn, but easy as hell to pass the class mainly because my test scores count for like 20% of my marking period grade.

and no, TGB, im not a virgin.


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