Yes - I also have been using a gaming adapter. I also have booted with
an Asus WL-330g and a dlink bridge also. We're going to implement 60
sunrays in a wireless environment so I have been testing all kinds of
configurations. Some have a faster refresh rate than others, but all
boot.
yes - offtopic
> I have been trying to set up something similar at home but wanted to do 
>   it wirelessly as the missus is not keen on cat5 running up the stairs 
> into each room. I am using some wireless bridges (Pheenet WAP 11) so 
> that the ray thinks it is connected to a normal wired hub. So far I am 
> only seeing the IP address on boot up. I guess the tftp boot forwarding 
> is the issue but on the bridges in question there appears to be no 
> option to enable bootp. Without wishing to stray too much off the 
> orginal topic I was wondering if anyone has been able to successfully 
> boot the rays without wires
> 
> Thanks
> Paul
> 
> Joe Reid wrote:
> > On Tue, Nov 15, 2005 at 09:56:22AM +0100, Markolf Gudjons wrote:
> > 
> >>Interesting setup, running your own Ray server...
> > 
> > 
> > SunRay at home is awsome.  So far I only have 3 set up.  Here's my
> > infrastructure:
> > 
> > SB1K as primary SRSS dual900 and 4gb.  Ultra2 as failover cluster
> > running all other home internal server processes (dns, ntp, etc).  On
> > my desk I have 2 Ray1's for working, sometimes separated to 2 so 2
> > people can work.  I have 1 Ray150 by the stereo for manipulating the
> > HTPC (sun AX1105-500 based system - sol10 as are the sb1k and u2).  I
> > want to put one in the kitchem in kisok mode showing the house hold
> > calendar and a browser and a few others around.  I've even thought
> > about one by the front door to head up home automation and alarm
> > stuff.
> > 
> > I live in a downtown area so most of my friends and I get DSL from the
> > same CO, I figure I could build a rig with a ray170 and some sort of
> > router and haul that around and have my login wherever I go - even the
> > bars that offer networking :-)
> > 
> > 
> >>In that case your cheapest alternative is probably a couple of used Cisco
> >>Pix 501s or similar stuff from other vendors to create a Lan-to-Lan IPSec
> >>tunnel to your friend's house. They also work as a DHCP server for the
> >>Ray.
> > 
> > 
> > What about a pair of WRTG45's - they're manipulatable and getting
> > pretty cheap too (friend's suggestion).  I'm pretty good with Solaris
> > and basic networking, but once you throw routers at me I get lost
> > pretty fast.
> > 
> 
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Blaine Hulbert
IT Department
Ernie Ball, Inc.
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