Either way is fine as long as you get the polarity right.  And make sure
you have that grounding-strap-thingy firmly attached to your wrist. 
;-)

John

>>> "Allen May"  7/9/01 12:34:09 PM >>>
Guys I ripped my PIX apart and CANNOT find the flux capacitor.  I
hooked up
a lightning rod to it just in case.  Does it go into the power supply
or do
I hook straight into the motherboard?

Allen

----- Original Message -----
From: "Bob Johnson" 
To: 
Sent: Monday, July 09, 2001 11:57 AM
Subject: RE: Failover distance between two PIXes [7:11468]


> What planet are you from!!!!
> PIX flux capacitors have had anti negative-induction protection since
4.47
> (and who can't remember the fabled matter-anti-matter bug of
4.45)...
> Sheesh......
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: John Neiberger [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
> Sent: Monday, July 09, 2001 9:29 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Subject: RE: Failover distance between two PIXes [7:11468]
>
>
> But beware...if you upgrade using a non-Cisco positronic quasitator,
you
> run the risk of creating a negative induction through the flux
capacitor
> which will result in inverted backpressure toward the source.  This
has
> the effect of cancelling out the signal or at least reducing it to
the
> point where you can never achieve failover.
>
> Besides, it voids your warranty.
>
> regards,
> John (who must not have enough work to do!)
>
> >>> "Peter Slow"  7/9/01 10:09:31 AM >>>
> quite simply, you need to upgrade the positronic quasitator on the
> motherboard of your packet-dropping device. this will allow the
> electron
> flows to migrate from the electro-channeling device over the
> flex-capacitor
> to a lambda on the quanta-channeling circuit.
>
> -Peter Slow
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Patrick Ramsey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] 
> Sent: Monday, July 09, 2001 11:35 AM
> To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
> Subject: Re: Failover distance between two PIXes [7:11468]
>
>
> Without the serial cable, there is no way to keep the configs
updated
> on
> both machines.  The ethernet cables are actualy what control
failover.
>
> In theory, you could run ip to and from a termserver on either end
and
> connect to a local serial port from that term server to the pix.
>
> IE. PIX1---->serial to TS1------>ethernet----->TS2------->serial to
> pix2
>
> Remember for failover to take place though you still have to have an
> ethernet connection between the two, and for stateful failover it
must
> be
> full duplex.
>
> -Patrick
>
> >>> "RB Jsn Eggert Gupmundsson"  07/09/01 11:18AM >>>
> Is there any way to create failover between PIXes over longer
distance
> than
> the max limit of the failover cable (modified RS-232). I am thinking
> of
> connecting two houses. The distanse between them is around 2
> kilometers.
> There is an Gb Ethernet optical cable between them that I can use if
> the PIX
> supports it. I have looked on the CCO but have not seen any article
> about
> this.
>
> Regards
> Jon Eggert Gudmundsson
> Network Administrator
> Icelandic Banks Data Center




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