I have had slow connection issue for local LAN users which I finally figured was because Outlook was registering the full DNS name instead of NETBIOS name in the registry . Once I changed that to NETBIOS name problem got resolved.
Kishore -----Original Message----- From: Andrey Fyodorov [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, October 08, 2002 2:11 PM To: Exchange Discussions Subject: TCP tuning Hi all. Could anyone here confirm whether this helps? http://rdweb.cns.vt.edu/public/notes/win2k-tcpip.htm I am looking at this because some of my customers are reporting slow Outlook performance despite VERY good Internet connectivity (high bandwidth, very good traceroutes in both directions). Some customers have to click Retry a couple of times before Outlook connects to their Exchange server. I have tried these settings on a lab server and it is running fine. However I can't really simluate the real world network load of the production server in the lab in order to verify whether these settings made any improvements. I am also checking these articles that indicate Win2K SP3 may help in my situation: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;Q301337 http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?scid=kb;en-us;Q301117 Andrey _________________________________________________________________ List posting FAQ: http://www.swinc.com/resource/exch_faq.htm Archives: http://www.swynk.com/sitesearch/search.asp To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Exchange List admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED] _________________________________________________________________ List posting FAQ: http://www.swinc.com/resource/exch_faq.htm Archives: http://www.swynk.com/sitesearch/search.asp To unsubscribe: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Exchange List admin: [EMAIL PROTECTED]