RE: US Stock [7:19433]

2001-09-12 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Sorry to waste b/w, but couldn't resist: Layer 8, Religion, would be my guess. Mark -Original Message- From: Howard C. Berkowitz [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, September 12, 2001 9:43 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject:Re: US Stock [7:19433] That's the beauty

RE: 'It's not the US they want to destroy. It's our arrogance' [7:19664]

2001-09-12 Thread Mark Monica Baker
You're mistaken. It's not arrogance, which is the domain of bullies until they are dethroned. It is PRIDE, which we have had for over 200 years, and will continue to have for hundreds of years in the future. If it was arrogance they sought to take away, they were aiming at the wrong target.

RE: sub-interface on Ethernet or FastEthernet [7:19394]

2001-09-12 Thread Mark Monica Baker
I tried it on a 2610 with 12.2.3, and could set encaps on the sub-interface to dot1q or sde (secure data exchange). Mark -Original Message- From: Chuck Larrieu [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, September 12, 2001 6:27 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject:RE:

RE: Voice Ports Need to handle?? [7:17792]

2001-08-30 Thread Mark Monica Baker
What do you mean? Are you talking physical ports to add to your lab? If so, all you need are a couple of FXS cards with phones attached. If you want to get fancy you could have one or 2 FXS and an FXO with a POTS line attached. Mark -Original Message- From: Cisco Lover [SMTP:[EMAIL

RE: T1 connections [7:17898]

2001-08-30 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Actually, DSU/CSU interfaces can be either DTE or DCE. To connect one of these to a DB-60 serial interface, you'll need a media converter (well actually an external CSU/DSU). Mark -Original Message- From: tu do [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2001 12:54 PM To:

RE: BGP memory requirement formula... HELP!!! [7:17888]

2001-08-30 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Also, check out: http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/459/41.shtml Mark -Original Message- From: MADMAN [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, August 30, 2001 2:56 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject:Re: BGP memory requirement formula... HELP!!! [7:17888] It's simpler than

RE: Flash memory issues [7:17561]

2001-08-28 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Very odd. I suspect bad simms or m/b. Could also be non-cisco approved mem. Some had a middle chip on them that seemed to do some sort of key/ID function. Do you have any other known good (preferably Cisco) simms to try? I don't believe the pc card slot works for reg IOS. I believe it is part

RE: ambiguous command [7:17568]

2001-08-28 Thread Mark Monica Baker
I recognized it from a test (I'd rather not say which one- even the paranoid have enemies) -Original Message- From: Priscilla Oppenheimer [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Tuesday, August 28, 2001 7:26 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject:RE: ambiguous command [7:17568] I think

RE: Passed Written [7:17466]

2001-08-28 Thread Mark Monica Baker
I went thru it, very worthwhile if you can get in. Last I checked (earlier this year) there was a long wait for it, comparable to the wait for the lab itself. You are run through a ccie-level lab over 3 days with a Cisco ccie who really knows his stuff (at least the one in my session sure

RE: Here is the new CCIE 1 day lab! [7:16960]

2001-08-27 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Sorry, that's only one example. The other 2 examples are Microsoft WinOS and Intel CPUs. Mark Through Simplicity you may become a simpleton. Through Complexity you may become redundant -Original Message- From: David L. Blair [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, August 27, 2001

RE: 2500/2600 rack bracket screws??? [7:17461]

2001-08-27 Thread Mark Monica Baker
I have bought ones at Home Depot or Ace Hardware (can't remember which). I think they were like #6x3/8. Take one up there and let your fingers do the walking (that's what I had to do). They weren't an exact match (the ends were pointy, not flat, for one), but they fit and held. I think they

RE: Here is the new CCIE 1 day lab! [7:16960]

2001-08-23 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Well, most of those are pretty self-explanatory, except # 9, which is a trick question. I know I shouldn't be giving answers, but, what the 'ell: Do NOT attempt to assemble the rifle using the Swahili manual (section c, paragraph 4 of the manual requires 2 hours of prayer, which will put you

RE: Help! Locked out of my 7513 Router! [7:16769]

2001-08-22 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Try changing the stop bits to 1, which is the default, I believe. The up/down messages are normal during boot operations on an unused interface. Mark -Original Message- From: Richard Chang [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2001 12:58 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

RE: Hub to Hub through 2600 [7:16328]

2001-08-16 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Have you tried moving things around to see if the problem follows any piece of equipment? Maybe a bad cable, bad port on hub, or speed/duplex mismatch. Have you tried rebooting router after adding hub? Do you lose link lights on the hub (and if so, is it just where the router plugs in, or on

RE: question [7:16005]

2001-08-14 Thread Mark Monica Baker
As far as WAN goes, anything above DS3 is typically fiber (or wireless in some cases). Copper CAN support much higher speeds (at least in a LAN environment), including GigE (and, I wouldn't be surprised, 10GigE when it comes out). DS3 is coax (copper) or fiber. Mark -Original

RE: Friday Follies - IP NAT behaviour [7:15822]

2001-08-13 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Sounds to me like he may have config'd NAT to forward all traffic to his web server. Mark -Original Message- From: Brian [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 1:46 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject:Re: Friday Follies - IP NAT behaviour [7:15822] why he

RE: e0 on 4000-m router [7:15861]

2001-08-13 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Sounds like a 1 port enet card to me. You have a choice of running either the aui port or the rj-45 port, but not both. I believe you can select between by using the media-type command on the interface. Mark -Original Message- From: Vik [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Monday,

RE: One interface-two IPs- NAT? [7:15460]

2001-08-09 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Actually, if he's trying to do NAT with only one interface, it won't work. You must have an inside (non-translated, usually private address range) and an outside (translated, usually Internet-routable) interface. At least one of each. What addresses you translate them into is irrelevant and

RE: Why Should the Binary Math Method Be Used to Subnet [7:15311]

2001-08-08 Thread Mark Monica Baker
You may not always have a tool available to calculate for you. I've been in several customer meetings where I was required to come up with network diagrams, including subnet masks, ad hoc. If I had needed to have them wait til I could power up my laptop, then use a program to do the work, it

FW: NAT on a 1601 router [7:15027]

2001-08-06 Thread Mark Monica Baker
As an FYI, NAT takes up about 160 bytes per translation. Check out this link for more info. http://www.cisco.com/warp/customer/cc/pd/iosw/ioft/iofwft/prodlit/iosnt_qp.htm Thanx, Mark Baker CCNP looking for a job -Original Message- From: Patrick Ramsey [SMTP:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent:

FW: Doubt... [7:14233]

2001-08-01 Thread Mark Monica Baker
If I remember correctly, the formula was: packets in queue=(packets_in/second - packets_out/sec)*number_of_secs. So if you have a line that can take 25 packets/sec and you're trying to feed it 50 packets/sec for 10 seconds, it would be: (50pps-25pps)*10=250packets in queue over 10 seconds.

RE: a question about making cisco 6506 as a dhcp server [7:14491]

2001-08-01 Thread Mark Monica Baker
Leo, If I understand you correctly, you want to do a manual binding, giving one particular DHCP client the same address all the time? If so, go here and take a look at the config: http://www.cisco.com/univercd/cc/td/doc/product/software/ios120/120newft /120t/120t1/easyip2.htm#xtocid432218

FW: Doubt... [7:14233]

2001-08-01 Thread Mark Monica Baker
If I remember correctly, the formula was: packets in queue=(packets_in/second - packets_out/sec)*number_of_secs. So if you have a line that can take 25 packets/sec and you're trying to feed it 50 packets/sec for 10 seconds, it would be: (50pps-25pps)*10=250packets in queue over 10 seconds.