On Sun, 2006-12-31 at 15:33 -0600, Michael B. Brutman
wrote:
In the case of a really old system like that, it
doesn't matter what the
network is - the network will never be the problem, unless I use bongos
as the transport mechanism.
Keep it in historical context... Bongos were a significant speed
increase over smoke signals.
Also, I note that you COULD have a slow network (10baseT) have an
adverse effect upon your 1.5 Mbit (IIRC) broadband connection. That
could happen if the network is jammed with traffic, and the collision
rate is such that the packets from the broadband can't get through in
timely fashion. In that case, increasing the network speed of the local
machines would reduce the time they spent occupying the network. Most
times, it won't matter, granted, but it COULD slow you down.
The bongo reference was tongue in cheek - I was alluding to this:
The Bongo Project: TCP/IP via Primitive Communication
The point being that my slowest machines will never be able to saturate
a 10Mbps Ethernet, or cause the collisions at the rate you allude to.
My PCjr can do at best 40KB/sec over the Ethernet, quite a bit less if
disk I/O is involved.
But you're welcome to try - the Jr is up and running. :-) (See my
previous email about TCP/IP Testing help)
Mike