Hi Paul,

I tried rebooting the modem about a dozen times.  I'll try "pump -i eth0" and 
see what happens.

~Kaz

--- In [email protected], "Paul" <pfrederi...@...> wrote:
>
> 
> 
> --- In [email protected], Scott <scottro@> wrote:
> >
> > On Sun, Jan 09, 2011 at 01:52:15AM -0000, kazman1914 wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > > 
> > > Thank you for showing such patience to an extreme newbie.  You asked:
> > 
> > Some folks here are good at that.  :)  (That's why it's called
> > Linux_Newbies).
> > 
> > 
> > To summarize
> > Time Warner gave you a cable modem (that also works your phone.)  You've
> > established that the hardware works, as Windows can get an address. 
> > 
> > You're not using wireless.  (That's what was meant by the question about
> > whether a wire was connected. )
> > 
> > > "If there is no wire and you are able to connect to the internet
> > > using Windows, please let us know that also. We will work
> > > from there."
> > 
> > > "Please tell us exactly which Ubuntu you installed. It is possible
> > > to download many different flavors of Ubuntu and some install what
> > > is called Network Manager (or equivalent) and some don't."
> > > 
> > > I'll have to get back to you on that.  It's the latest non-BETA version, 
> > > 10.04 I think, but I'll have to check to be sure.  Based on my 
> > > conversation with customer service at TWC, the modem is set to provide 
> > > the IP address via DHCP.  
> > 
> > Question--does Ubuntu definitely see the ethernet card.  That is, if you
> > open a terminal  (In Ubuntu, I think it's under
> > Applications=>Accessories) and type 
> > 
> > ifconfig eth0
> > 
> > Does it show something?
> > 
> > My guess is always on NetworkManager, which came by its nickname of 
> > NetworkMangler honestly.  
> > 
> > Also, Ubuntu 10.04 has long term support (henceforth known as LTS), but
> > it isn't the newest.  The newest theoretically stable version is 10.10
> > and there's an alpha of the next one coming out. 
> > 
> > I'd be really curious to know if other distributions worked.  
> > 
> > For the moment, please try the ifconfig eth0 command and see if that
> > brings a result.  You'll get about 4 or 5 lines of output, assuming it
> > sees the card.  If you see something like failure fetching device, then
> > that would be the problem. 
> > 
> > Also, please post the output of
> > 
> > lspci |grep -i ether
> > 
> > (lspci gives information about the hardware--grep gets specific
> > information, in this case the ethernet card.  Usually, the output will
> > be Ethernet with a capital E, but we use the -i to make it case
> > insensitive.)
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > -- 
> > Scott Robbins
> > PGP keyID EB3467D6
> > ( 1B48 077D 66F6 9DB0 FDC2 A409 FA54 EB34 67D6 )
> > gpg --keyserver pgp.mit.edu --recv-keys EB3467D6
> > 
> > Spike: What, your Mom doesn't know? 
> > Joyce: Know what? 
> > Buffy: That I'm, uh...in a band. A rock band...with Spike here. 
> > Spike: Right. She plays the-the triangle... 
> > Buffy: Drums. 
> > Spike: Drums, yeah. She's hell on the old skins, you know. 
> > Joyce: (to Spike) And what do you do?
> > Spike: Well I sing.
> >
> 
> 
> First thing I'd still do is reboot the modem. Just because it seems to "work" 
> doesn't mean it is actually fully functional. Then for laughs just type pump 
> -i eth0 and cross your fingers it might work.
> 
> I like network mangler! That has been my experience with it and this other 
> devilish garbage that seems to get installed by default anymore called 
> avahi-daemon.
> 
> While many changes have made Linux supposedly more wireless friendly they 
> definitely make plain old wired connections a byzantine mess!
> 
> Some files I have found that affect network behavior include:
> 
> /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules
> /etc/network/interfaces
> 
> 
> Then there are the traditional files one would expect:
> 
> 
> /etc/resolv.conf
> /etc/hosts
> 
> Helpful commands include:
> 
> pump
> 
> route -n
> 
> less /etc/network/run/ifstate
> 
> If you would like to get rid of pesky programs:
> 
> # apt-get remove network-manager
> 
> # update-rc.d -f avahi-daemon remove
> 
> # /etc/init.d/networking restart
>




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