Wireless is one of today's hottest local area network (LAN)
technologies for government installations because it can
deliver network access in buildings that are difficult to
wire -- due to age, structure or historical reasons.

If your agency is evaluating a move to wireless, one of your
first considerations should be upgrading your hubs to Cisco
Systems high-speed switches. By doing so, you can more
effectively support wireless LANs to meet increasing bandwidth
demands down the road.


Visit http://www.cisco.com/offer/governmentlan/V498-1001S now to
download a FREE copy of "Lessons on Freedom and Power:
Combining Wired and Wireless Networks for Government
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you'll need to integrate wireless into your LAN and meet
high-bandwidth application demands in the future.

Cisco Catalyst(R) 3500 XL and 2900 XL desktop switches offer
10/100 and Gigabit Ethernet connectivity, giving you the best
end-to-end solutions for the specific needs of government
LANs. By building a high-speed LAN with Cisco switches,
you'll optimize your networks for wireless without straining
your budget-keeping your agencies on the leading edge.

Take the first steps in preparing your government agency
for wireless technology by upgrading your network with Cisco
Catalyst desktop switches. Just download your FREE design
guide at http://www.cisco.com/offer/governmentlan/V498-1001S today,
and contact your Cisco authorized reseller before October 31, 2000,
to learn about limited-time savings on these switches for your
government agency.

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>From: David Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>Reply-To: David Jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>To: "'H.K Braimoh'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: RE: Intermittent loss of connectivity
>Date: Tue, 15 Aug 2000 08:11:39 -0400
>
>You can check the interface of the router to see if it is getting carrier
>transitions or dropping packets.  I ran into something similiar once at a
>customer's.  I set up a new site for them and they supplied the ip
>addresses.  Come to find out, the ethernet ip's they gave me for the new
>site were in use somewhere else.  So now, we had two routes going two
>different places for the same subnet.  Readdressed the new site and took 
>out
>the duplicate route.
>
>Dave
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: H.K Braimoh [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
>Sent: Tuesday, August 15, 2000 6:04 AM
>To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>Subject: Intermittent loss of connectivity
>
>
>Hi all, I am troubleshooting connectivity problems we have to one of our
>sites. there is continuous flapping on the link. For every 5 or 6 ping
>requests at least one or two times out. the sites are linked via FRA-ATM,
>the router on site is a 2500, has anyone had a similar experience? or has
>anyone got any suggestions on where to start troubleshooting?
>
>
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