This may or may not be related to your issue, but you mentioned that the IOS images were different versions etween your Master and Slave switches. Cisco recommends that the images on all stack members are the same. Different versions, even a minor version, can result in unexpected behavior.
Typically, if there is a duplex/speed misconfiguration on a port it will show excessive collisions. Unless you know something is setup manually (e.g. an older HP printer with JetDirect), then just leave it on a-duplex and a-speed and monitor the ports for collisions. If you see a port with...
As KiscoKid stated you need to enable split tunneling on the pix. If your client has their vpn configured as vpngroups on the pix then it is very easy.
Create an acl for the split_tunneling ip address range then define split-tunnel for each vpngroup as shown in the example below.
For example...
IF you are running Windows XP you can use RDC. This is what I am using becuase I can use my Active Directory account through our VPN to log into the PC/Server and connect using procomm or hyperterm to the PBX.
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