Both are connecting. Its just that Windows is getting more bandwidth, and when connected individually I can get good speeds on both systems.
On Saturday, December 29, 2012 2:43:29 PM UTC+5:30, Visakh wrote: > > Hi, > Are you saying that Linux can't connect at all, or that windows is > getting a better connection? > > What happens when one system is connected at a time? (Windows and > Linux). Is ubuntu still able to connect when windows is offline? > Try doing a ping check from both systems (one at a time and then > both together). See if there is any packet loss or extra delay in any > case. > If the case is that only one system can connect at a time the > 'Network Address Translation' settings may be wrong. > > Regards, > Gokul Das > > On Dec 29, 4:36 am, vineeth kartha <vineeth.kar...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Dear Friends, > > > > I have a broadband connection with 1Mbps speed, and it works perfectly > when > > one system is connected. But recently I bought a TP-Link router and > tried > > to share the broadband on two laptops ( One running windows and the > other > > running Ubuntu), The windows laptop gets the max speed and the ubuntu > > laptop doesn't get any. How can I resolve this issue. Please help and > > thanks in advance. > -- "Freedom is the only law". "Freedom Unplugged" http://www.ilug-tvm.org You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "ilug-tvm" group. To control your subscription visit http://groups.google.co.in/group/ilug-tvm/subscribe To post to this group, send email to ilug-tvm@googlegroups.com To unsubscribe from this group, send email to ilug-tvm-unsubscr...@googlegroups.com For details visit the google group page: http://groups.google.com/group/ilug-tvm?hl=en