RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-09 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED] (John Nemeth)
On May 30, 7:10am, "Hire, Ejay" wrote: } } Back to the off topic subject of Liquid cooled CPU's, most desings I've seen } use mineral oil. A fault with this design is that "bubbles" of moisture can } settle out and sink onto the Board/cpu. The other thing I was wondering is wouldn't the mi

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-08 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
refrigerator compressor to below freezing. The entire motherboard was > > submerged & benchmarks went way up...rofl. > > > > Allen > > ----- Original Message - > > From: "Jarmoc, Jeff" > > To: > > Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 3:43 PM

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-08 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
refrigerator compressor to below freezing. The entire motherboard was > > submerged & benchmarks went way up...rofl. > > > > Allen > > ----- Original Message - > > From: "Jarmoc, Jeff" > > To: > > Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 3:43 PM

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-07 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
refrigerator compressor to below freezing. The entire motherboard was > > submerged & benchmarks went way up...rofl. > > > > Allen > > ----- Original Message - > > From: "Jarmoc, Jeff" > > To: > > Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 3:43 PM

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-07 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
refrigerator compressor to below freezing. The entire motherboard was > > submerged & benchmarks went way up...rofl. > > > > Allen > > ----- Original Message - > > From: "Jarmoc, Jeff" > > To: > > Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 3:43 PM

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-07 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
refrigerator compressor to below freezing. The entire motherboard was > > submerged & benchmarks went way up...rofl. > > > > Allen > > ----- Original Message - > > From: "Jarmoc, Jeff" > > To: > > Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 3:43 PM

RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-07 Thread Hire, Ejay
Flourinert - (Pronounced Floor-in-ert) is pretty neat stuff. You can put your tv in a tank of the stuff and keep on watching. also, if you've got a intermittent solder joint, plug it in and dunk it in florinert. You'll see a thin stream of bubbles rising from the fault. First time I saw it was

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-07 Thread MADMAN
My first job in networking, or should I say connecting Sun 350's to thicknet ethernet vampire taps until they let me get my newbie hands on those brand new Cisco thingies, was at Cray Research. The Cray2 circuit boards were immersed in florinert (sp?) to keep them cool. Ran about $400 a gallon a

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-06 Thread Allen May
> refrigerator compressor to below freezing. The entire motherboard was > > submerged & benchmarks went way up...rofl. > > > > Allen > > ----- Original Message - > > From: "Jarmoc, Jeff" > > To: > > Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 3:

RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-04 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer
I was wondering if someone would respond that way! ;-) We did this a while ago before corporate Starbucks decided to roll out their "approved" method. I think it was over a year ago that we put it in. We use the Apple Airport. We didn't use any antennae beyond the antenna inside the Airport. W

RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-04 Thread Patrick Ramsey
really? we did a roll out to starbucks nationwide through mobilestar using ap340's and some nokia and 2621 routers. We never saw these issues. Was this a private contract you did with them? And where did you place the antenneas? Patrick Ramsey Sr. Network Engineer WellStar Health Systems 77

RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-04 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer
On a slightly more serious note, I installed 802.11 at our local Starbucks and the signal quality if pretty bad. We finally realized that it was being affected by all the jugs of coffee and other liquids and by the "big bags of mostly water" (humans). (Some StarTrek creature referred to humans

RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-04 Thread Hire, Ejay
If there is a significant interest in this, let me know. I can make the "lens" part on my lathe. -ejh -Original Message- From: Jarmoc, Jeff [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 4:43 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: wireless max distance questio

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-03 Thread Brad Ellis
Jim, It really depends on what kind of antenna and what's in between (you'll need to calculate your fresnel zone). If you have a clear line of site, you should be fine with a good antenna. If you have some trees or whatnot, you might need a 1W amp. Ive been doing a lot of research on wireless

RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-03 Thread Ken Diliberto
Priscilla, Didn't you see where it says you're suppose to eat the chips first and use the *empty* can? I don't think you considered what would happen to the signal when moisture/mold/mildew set in. You'd have a soggy pile of "living" stuff, which would probably really mess up the signal propert

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-03 Thread Steven A. Ridder
was > submerged & benchmarks went way up...rofl. > > Allen > - Original Message - > From: "Jarmoc, Jeff" > To: > Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 3:43 PM > Subject: RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822] > > > > There's also the good ol&#

RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-03 Thread Priscilla Oppenheimer
Thursday, January 03, 2002 2:17 PM >To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] >Subject: Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822] > > >I've heard of a Cisco antenna boosters. Check the qprg. or >http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/pd/witc/ao340ap/prodlit/airoa_ds.htm > >Some directional a

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-03 Thread Allen May
went way up...rofl. Allen - Original Message - From: "Jarmoc, Jeff" To: Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 3:43 PM Subject: RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822] > There's also the good ol' 802.11b pringles can hack. I haven't tried it, > and it

RE: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-03 Thread Jarmoc, Jeff
Jeff Jarmoc - CCSA, CCNA, MCSE Network Analyst - Grubb & Ellis [EMAIL PROTECTED] -Original Message- From: Steven A. Ridder [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: Thursday, January 03, 2002 2:17 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822] I've heard

Re: wireless max distance question [7:30822]

2002-01-03 Thread Steven A. Ridder
I've heard of a Cisco antenna boosters. Check the qprg. or http://www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/pd/witc/ao340ap/prodlit/airoa_ds.htm Some directional antennas can get up to 25 miles. You may need a line of sight though. Check with Cisco FYI, Linksys wireless access points can be hacked via fir