Hi,
It detects the speed right, I but I tried to set it manully too. Nothing
changed. The hub it only 10Mbit. That why has only one light that indicate
correct connection. Everything seems ok, but...
thank you anyway.
Joe
"Kaptain Krunch" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:Ms-dncw9Pp-hQ17cRVn-(E-Mail Removed)...
> ok, think I know what might be wrong... do you have autodetect speed
> selected? if so try 10mbs half and see if it connects, then change to
> manual 100mbs half then try full...your router should respond with the
> speed
> lights. It might be default speed of 1000mbs (unless the router is a
> 1000mbs which I doubt) Let me know...
>
> KK
>
> "Joe" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:cpt52v$og$(E-Mail Removed)...
>> Hi Pablo,
>>
>> I tried everything you wrote, but what I all can can conclude after so
> much
>> trying is that there is some sort of incompatibility between these two
>> devices (router and network card), because as I sad that each one works
>> perfectly with other device (different router resp. network card) only if
> I
>> put them together I cannot establish any connection although router and
>> windows indicate that network area is connected. Maybe it has something
>> to
>> do with this new 10/100/1000 Mbit NIC, because, well, I'm quite sure that
> I
>> do the configuration right. Also I've heard that this Realtek 8169 is not
>> the high quality NIC.
>>
>> Joe
>>
>> "Pablo" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>> news:(E-Mail Removed)...
>> > Joe,
>> >
>> > I can't resist but to ask some basic questions. I ask this one a lot
> when
>> > people say they can't ping something, because not being able to ping
>> > something is only the tip of the iceberg. What does 'can't ping' mean?
>> >
>> > o 'request timed out'- That's a tough one- device you're pinging isn't
>> > responding - could have many reasons.
>> > o 'destination net unreachable'. This is often because the ip address
> on
>> > your laptop is on a different subnet than
>> > your router. Check that. If the laptop has 169.65.124.12 and your
>> > router has 192.168.1.1- that's your problem.
>> >
>> > On older 3com hubs, there is some memory in those routers/hubs and it
> does
>> > keep a kind of routing table. I spend over four hours trying to
> diagnose
>> > a
>> > problem that you describe where I was getting 'destination net
>> > unreachable',
>> > and all the ip's were on the proper subnet. Someone said "did you
>> > power
>> > the
>> > hub down and back up?" I hadn't because I figured it was a solid state
>> > device that didn't 'remember' anything about previous connections. Try
>> > that, and your problem might go away.
>> >
>> > don't discard the cable. Many years of life have been removed from
>> > many
> a
>> > network tech trying to fix a 'computer/hardware' problem when the patch
>> > cable they used was simply bad. Also, try different ports on the hub-
>> > sometimes (although rare) they do go bad.
>> >
>> >
>> > Paul
>> >
>> > "Joe" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>> > news:cpat86$99j$(E-Mail Removed)...
>> >> Hi!
>> >>
>> >> I have new nootebook Acer 1522Lmi with Realtek 8169 ethernet card
>> >> (10/100/1000Mbit) and old ADSL router 3com Office connect 812 Adsl (it
>> >> has
>> >> 10Mbit hub). I can't get them to communicate although both works with
>> > other
>> >> hardware (my card works with different router and my router with
>> >> different
>> >> ethernet card). Windows XP says that Local area network is connected,
> but
>> > I
>> >> cannot even ping my router, I don't recieve any packets. Can you help
> me
>> >> resolve the problem? Is it some sort of incompatibility? What can I
>> >> try
>> >> to
>> >> do?
>> >>
>> >> Thank you
>> >>
>> >> Joe
>> >>
>> >>
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>
>
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