Re: what is the 1394 connection ?
- From: Husky <cbminfo@xxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sun, 04 Sep 2005 20:26:04 -0400
On Sun, 4 Sep 2005 18:43:40 -0500, "Vanguard" <vanguard.code@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
>"Husky" <cbminfo@xxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
>news:o56mh1hvg3u3vf6bciumpgv78l6idasfkj@xxxxxxxxxx
>>I had the machine into the shop for days. One day I stepped in, and
>>they had
>> something they said was the Internet connection [not the 56k modem]
>> plugged in.
>> I never saw it used, just connected.
>>
>> Thinking about this since all they had was a wire was why can't I do
>> that
>> instead of this 56k modem ?
>>
>> They said something about I can if I use road runner.
>> What are they talking about ?
>> It shows my 1394 connection this moment as active. @ 400 bps.
>>
>> Before I took it to the shop, my LAN and 1394 were both disabled.
>> I'm thinking this 1394 being enabled may be what's slowing my modem
>> down now.
>>
>> If that's true I'd just as soon have the 1394 disabled again.
>>
>> --
>> more pix @ http://members.toast.net/cbminfo/index.html
>
>
>It doesn't hurt to have the other network connectoids enabled as long as
>you do not attach the devices specified within them to a networking
>device. You only need one connectoid to be enabled (unless you are
>configuring your host to act as a gateway, but which is highly unlikely
>if you are talking about analog 56K modems for dial-up access).
>
>What you are seeing under the Network Connections applet in Control
>Panel are the connectoids. These are network *definitions*, not the
>actual devices used by them (i.e., those aren't devices but
>definitions). They define which protocols are bound to which device:
>you get to pick the protocols and to which device they are bound. For
>example, and since I had both a NIC (network interface card) for
>Ethernet LAN access and an analog 56K modem, I had a free dial-up
>provider (under 10 hours was free) which I kept for backup to provide
>e-mail service should my broadband provider go dead (either no
>connectivity or problems with their e-mail service). Normally only the
>LAN connectoid was enabled (it bound to the NIC). If I had to switch, I
>disabled the LAN connectoid and enabled the dial-up connectoid (which
>was bound to the analog 56K modem). When my ISP was back up for
>broadband access, I'd disable the dial-up connectoid and enable the LAN
>connectoid (for the NIC specified in it that was connected to their
>cable modem).
>
>Normally you should only have one network connectoid enabled. I doubt
>you know what is a gateway or how to set one up, and that's about the
>only time that I can think of where you would want to have more than one
>connectoid enabled at a time. It doesn't hurt to have multiple
>connectoids enabled if, say, only one of them was actually bound to a
>networking device. Most users of the Firewire port use them for digital
>cameras. Disabling the IEEE-1394 networking connectoid won't disable
>the Firewire port. The shop used the Firewire port because they had a
>Firewire hub, switch, or broadband modem to which they could connect to
>give them vastly superior download speed to retrieve any drivers,
>patches, or utilities that they needed to install on your computer.
>They forgot to disable it but then normally leaving it enabled doesn't
>cause a problem. Mine has been disabled ever since I got the computer
>but then I never attach any network devices to a Firewire port.
>
>You can disable the IEEE-1394 connectoid, especially since you don't
>have anything attached to a Firewire port. However, and because you had
>nothing connected to it, enabling or disabling it won't affect your
>speed using the LAN connectoid (which normally uses a NIC for an
>Ethernet connection) or the speed of a dial-up connectoid (for your
>analog 56K modem).
>
>Go ahead and disable the IEEE-1394 (Firewire) network connectoid. You
>won't lose Internet connectivity (as long as your dial-up connectoid is
>enabled) but it isn't the cause of your perceived slowdown, either. Are
>you using the Firewire port at all for networking, like providing two
>network interfaces for ICS (Internet Connection Service) where the
>Firewire port is used for networking amongst your intranetwork hosts and
>the dial-up modem is used to share the Internet access (i.e., you are
>using your host as a gateway via ICS to share the Internet access
>amongst several hosts at home)?
>You can disable the IEEE-1394 connectoid, especially since you don't
>have anything attached to a Firewire port. However, and because you had
>nothing connected to it, enabling or disabling it won't affect your
>speed using the LAN connectoid (which normally uses a NIC for an
>Ethernet connection) or the speed of a dial-up connectoid (for your
>analog 56K modem).
Well that was totally confusing till I got to this. Actually the connection
says connected. Where all but my 2 modem connections were either connected or
disconnected. Which is where the confusion is. If there's a 1394 connected @
400 bps. I'd sure like to see some of that speed.
I disabled it and it now shows disabled.
something above about them having a 'The shop used the Firewire port because
they had a Firewire hub, switch, or broadband modem'
In the back of my machine it was just a wire. And when I asked could I get DSL
by plugging in that wire, they said I could if I had roadrunner. Roadrunner,
far as I know is an ISP. What would that have to do with plugging a wire into
my machine bypassing the modem ?
Don't get so technical if you choose to reply. I haven't even looked into
anything but modems ever.
I started with a 300 baud external, and now use a 56k internal.
--
more pix @ http://members.toast.net/cbminfo/index.html
.
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