We have a small network with two Windows 2000 servers both acting as domain controllers. One is also a DHCP server, the other provides remote access for VPN clients.
The internet connection for the office is provided through a DSL connection distributed via a cable/dsl router. In the "forwarders" tab on the DNS servers, the dsl router's IP is listed.
On each client machine, the actual DNS servers' IP addresses are entered rather than being provided by DHCP.
The internet connection is primarily slow when finding a website. If you go to google, eg, it will take forever to go just to google. But then doing a search will be rather quick. However, if you close out or go to another website, it will be slow again coming back to google. More than just the slowness of it not being cached or something, too.
TIA
The internet connection for the office is provided through a DSL connection distributed via a cable/dsl router. In the "forwarders" tab on the DNS servers, the dsl router's IP is listed.
On each client machine, the actual DNS servers' IP addresses are entered rather than being provided by DHCP.
The internet connection is primarily slow when finding a website. If you go to google, eg, it will take forever to go just to google. But then doing a search will be rather quick. However, if you close out or go to another website, it will be slow again coming back to google. More than just the slowness of it not being cached or something, too.
TIA