RE: [SA-list] OT: Question

2006-01-07 Thread Kevin Stone
There are a couple of these that I've heard of in the unix world, nothing for Windows. I can definitely see a need in the small to midsize market where they are relying on consumer grade network hardware like Netgear and Linksys. Limiting just P2P traffic on our network was a huge bandwidth saving

RE: [SA-list] OT: Question

2006-01-06 Thread 1st Lt Greg Weigold, CAP
Actually, I was thinking that a bandwidth-limiter on a per-machine basis might work very well for some of the small business networks that I support on the side.  Those folks can't afford to fork out $5000+ for a "real" router so there's no limiting capabilities right now.   Tell me more, Dirk.

RE: [SA-list] OT: Question

2006-01-06 Thread Dirk Bulinckx
Title: RE: [SA-list] OT: Question Levels of the coffee machine and soft drink machine can be checked IF they are connected to the network and have an SNMP interface :-)   Dirk.   From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Chris MangSent: Friday, January 06, 2006 6:07

RE: [SA-list] OT: Question

2006-01-06 Thread Chris Mang
Title: RE: [SA-list] OT: Question How about an add-in to check the levels in the coffee machine and soft drink machine?  :-) Seriously, though - bandwidth limiting is best handled at the router/switch level because of centralization of administration.  A software based solution would be

RE: [SA-list] OT: Question

2006-01-04 Thread Rowland,David
Title: RE: [SA-list] OT: Question Dirk You can do most of that on cisco routers using traffic shaping, take a look on the cisco site. As cisco is pretty well the defacto standard for routers don’t think there is much call for a software product. Dave

Re: [SA-list] OT: Question

2006-01-04 Thread Jason Passow
PM *To:* salive@woodstone.nu *Subject:* RE: [SA-list] OT: Question Hey Dirk, We do bandwidth using QoS on our network currently. Not much interest here for that. Steve Hay Community Savings _ *From: * [EMAIL PROTECTED] [_mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

RE: [SA-list] OT: Question

2006-01-04 Thread Dirk Bulinckx
No thinking about a "new" product. Dirk. -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of David Webster Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2006 8:15 PM To: salive@woodstone.nu Subject: RE: [SA-list] OT: Question Do you mean to limit resourc

RE: [SA-list] OT: Question

2006-01-04 Thread David Webster
Do you mean to limit resources used by Servers Alive? -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dirk Bulinckx Sent: Wednesday, January 04, 2006 2:05 PM To: salive@woodstone.nu Subject: [SA-list] OT: Question Just doing some "research" :-) Would

RE: [SA-list] OT: Question

2006-01-04 Thread Dirk Bulinckx
Title: RE: [SA-list] OT: Question What is QoS? (or is this Quality of Service) And is this done via software (part of the OS?) or hardware?   Dirk.   From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Steven HaySent: Wednesday, January 04, 2006 8:11 PMTo: salive

RE: [SA-list] OT: Question

2006-01-04 Thread Steven Hay
Title: RE: [SA-list] OT: Question Hey Dirk, We do bandwidth using QoS on our network currently.  Not much interest here for that. Steve Hay Community Savings _ From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]  On Behalf Of Dirk Bulinckx