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Author Topic: Home Network Question  (Read 4221 times)

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deviator

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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #15 on: 16 August 2018, 08:31:58 »

The Dell laptop has 'lost'  the Toshiba laptop.

Nothing has altered on the settings of either machine :(

It's magically appeared back this morning :o

Have you tried turning it off and back on again?  ;D :D ;D
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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #16 on: 16 August 2018, 08:46:41 »

The Dell laptop has 'lost'  the Toshiba laptop.

Nothing has altered on the settings of either machine :(

It's magically appeared back this morning :o

Have you tried turning it off and back on again?  ;D :D ;D

I did several restarts yesterday on both machines, the Toshiba would not show up on the Dell.

This morning it does, weird.
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Kevin Wood

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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #17 on: 16 August 2018, 09:35:25 »

The Dell laptop has 'lost'  the Toshiba laptop.

Nothing has altered on the settings of either machine :(

It's magically appeared back this morning :o

Have you tried turning it off and back on again?  ;D :D ;D

I did several restarts yesterday on both machines, the Toshiba would not show up on the Dell.

This morning it does, weird.
That's windows networking for you. ;)
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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #18 on: 16 August 2018, 09:35:58 »

The Dell laptop has 'lost'  the Toshiba laptop.

Nothing has altered on the settings of either machine :(

It's magically appeared back this morning :o

Have you tried turning it off and back on again?  ;D :D ;D

I did several restarts yesterday on both machines, the Toshiba would not show up on the Dell.

This morning it does, weird.
That's windows networking for you. ;)

 :'( :y
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aaronjb

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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #19 on: 16 August 2018, 09:45:48 »

That's windows networkingcomputers for you. ;)

Fixed that for you, Kevin ;D

I mean, I've worked in IT for over 20 years, I know they are devices that operate on logic; but they sure as heck give all impressions to the contrary ;D

[edit] I am reminded of this, for some reason: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQGtucrJ8hM
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Kevin Wood

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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #20 on: 16 August 2018, 12:01:47 »

That's windows networkingcomputers for you. ;)

Fixed that for you, Kevin ;D

I mean, I've worked in IT for over 20 years, I know they are devices that operate on logic; but they sure as heck give all impressions to the contrary ;D

[edit] I am reminded of this, for some reason: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQGtucrJ8hM

 ;D

I've never understood how you can have Windows machines connected together at 1GBPS yet they seem to take 10 minutes to find each other - if at all.

How can you make it this bad?

.. and then, your VPN connection drops, and the machine had (miraculously) picked up a device at the other end of it, so windows explorer blocks until that device responds, but it's never going to. Did nobody tell them that things on a network are only sometimes there? >:(
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aaronjb

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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #21 on: 16 August 2018, 12:46:30 »

Did nobody tell them that things on a network are only sometimes there? >:(

I think they based a lot of design assumptions either on NFS, or the same assumptions that were used when NFS was designed.. networks are 100% reliable and are only ever local with very low latency.

Which was probably true, in 1985 ;D
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Kevin Wood

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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #22 on: 16 August 2018, 12:49:43 »


Which was probably true, in 19865 ;D

FTFY. I was connected to a wireless IP network in 1988.. at a mighty 1.2 kbps. 8)
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deviator

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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #23 on: 16 August 2018, 13:08:38 »

FTFY. I was connected to a wireless IP network in 1988.. at a mighty 1.2 kbps. 8)

I was doing packet radio in 1988! If I was lucky, I'd get 9600 baud. More frequently it was closer to 1200 baud.
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Kevin Wood

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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #24 on: 16 August 2018, 14:20:51 »

FTFY. I was connected to a wireless IP network in 1988.. at a mighty 1.2 kbps. 8)

I was doing packet radio in 1988! If I was lucky, I'd get 9600 baud. More frequently it was closer to 1200 baud.

I never got 9600 BAUD working. Nobody else local to talk to at that speed.  ::)

Actually, I came across a G3RUH modem card in the loft a couple of days ago... ;D
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aaronjb

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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #25 on: 16 August 2018, 14:39:48 »

I wasn't cool enough for packet radio (although a friend and I were interested, it was somewhat cost prohibitive to 12 year olds ;D ) - 1200/75 was my first modem, though, robbed from school and hooked up to Duncan's BBC Master (teacher parents ;D I only had a Spectrum).

It was all downhill from there! 2400, 9600, 14k4, etc. Dialling long distance overseas numbers of unsavoury BBSes, running up giant phone bills...
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deviator

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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #26 on: 16 August 2018, 15:36:12 »

FTFY. I was connected to a wireless IP network in 1988.. at a mighty 1.2 kbps. 8)

I was doing packet radio in 1988! If I was lucky, I'd get 9600 baud. More frequently it was closer to 1200 baud.

I never got 9600 BAUD working. Nobody else local to talk to at that speed.  ::)

Actually, I came across a G3RUH modem card in the loft a couple of days ago... ;D

I started with a Baycom board and then eventually progressed to a Kantronics TNC. I think I still have both - somewhere! I've certainly kept my HF set and UHF/VHF set. I stopped using 2m because it was too effective. I got bored of being interupted whilst talking to mates to get signal reports. My record was, I was running 0.5w and spoke to a chap in Cornwall, he was using a Yagi pointed at me, I upped the power and we had a quick chat. My location is ideal for DX'ing, if I was into the competitive side of it.
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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #27 on: 16 August 2018, 15:54:54 »

Yes, in a nice 2m location here too, to the south-west, at least. I half - heartedly put a beam up a few years back, not particularly high. 3rd station I worked was in Northern Spain. I too should do more, really.
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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #28 on: 16 August 2018, 17:13:49 »

If you're reliant on what was the old Computer Browser method of discovering machines, you need to change. It was shit in Lan Manager, remained shit in Windows for Workgroups, and the passage of time hasn't helped. Bloody browser elections and all that shit.

And other devices in the chain that didn't really exist in the early 90s will try to curtail the broadcast packets, including Windows' own firewall (but also the router and the Wifi).

Home networking is so 1990s, and barely relevant as we approach 2020.  Files are cloud hosted, printers are properly network aware, gaming is all online.  If you are one of the niche reasons for home networking, do it properly with DNS, or hosts if you like a bodge.
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Re: Home Network Question
« Reply #29 on: 16 August 2018, 17:15:22 »

Not having a licence, I used to have to get a couple of mates to get me on Packet. Might have been sluggish, but saved my horrific phone bills a bit :D
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