August 26th, 2005, 01:20 AM
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#21 (permalink)
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Join Date: May 2005 Location: South of heaven
Posts: 204
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Originally Posted by clearbluereason Be careful in the router you choose--some can only produce a maximum of 10/100 not serve multiple computers each at 10/100 speeds. I don't know of a software in Windows that will let you share to incoming connections--windows won't even switch to the faster of the two ( I had this isssue when I was on a wlan and a T1 at the same time). I'm sure you could use some software in Linux to use both lines, but as previously mentioned it is not the equivalent of adding both bandwidths together.
Heh, reminds me of the time I couldn't find my router so I used both the USB and the lan connection to game with a friend. It would work great for an hour with latency < 20 ms, but then it would spike to like 3000ms and I'd have to reset it... oh well, it wasn't my hardware. heh heh heh. | You can bridge the connections from within windows by ctrl selecting the adapters in network conns and right click then bridge connections-
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