Several factors could be at play with this. The Linksys could be blocking the VPN ports and also it could be the set-up of the 3002 whether its in a network extension mode or PAT mode.
Check out this article from Cisco to see if it answers any questions...
How about a dual ISP router and connect either two aDSL connections or 1DSL/1Cable to the router to share the badnwidth and also for redundancy. If the DSL goes down chances are the cable will still run. Also you will be load balancing over the two connections.
Yeah its not your Internet. Are your collegues connecting at the same time as you or are they telling you this after the fact. From what it sounds like is you are connecting when everyone else or other people are connecting to the VPN and depending on the circuit coming into the VPN will...
show mac
show mac-address-table
Is this what your looking for?
from there if you know the MAC address your looking for you can further trace it down to a hub or a different switch.
snmp-server community <NAME> RO
snmp-server community <NAME> RW
Add a name of your community string without the <>
First one if read-only and second one is read-write.
I would set it up the following way.
Router>Logical Switch>XBox
Router>Logical Switch>XBox
Router>PC
Dont confuse the Logical switch with the four port switch built in the router.
Dont buy a hub for the reason a switch is about the same price and will route via layer three with the MAC...
What type of internet connection are you using? Dedicated line, aDSL, Cable?
It doesnt sound like the router due to no limitations set in a router to allow limited amount of connections. It sounds like your circuit is to small.
Are you sure your getting all 716Kbps?
You may want to get a...
I understand its not for profit organization but I would rather quit computers than to ever try to get ICS to work within Windows Especially with XP.
How about a dial-up router to share the internet? Hawking technology has one for a fair price. You would connect an external modem to the Hawking...
Private or not the IP can still be used as long as they keep those IP's private in terms of never using them to access other networks from their own or the internet.
In any case they need to access the outside world whether it be the internet or a customers WAN/LAN then they can NAT and PAT.
Your VPN connection is only as fast as your slowest link and the number of users on the pipe.
So if you have 512K on one side of the pipe then that would be your weakest link.
Also note that if these links are used for other traffic such as HTTP or FTP then that too will cause the bandwidth to...
Did you set up your VPN properties in the router?
In the settings in the router setup your VPN group and users or atleast the group settings and create a password.
Here is the PDF for the router.
ftp://ftp.linksys.com/pdf/RV042-ug-50514-web.pdf
Yes there is a difference but for your question there is not Cisco Standard.
There are only three types of VLAN protocols:
802.1O ISL (Inter-switch Link)(Ethernet)
802.1q (Supported on only Fast-ethernet & Gigethernet, not ethernet)
LANE (LAN Emulation) (used with ATM)
Easiest way is to take one port on the current switch for the LAN and one from the router's switch ports and daisy chain them together.
So your connection would look like this:
DSL>Modem>Router>Switch>Computer's
Dont worry about DHCP it is not required.
I would not use your windows 2003...
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