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Off Topic : Re: e Signal and MS 7.03



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Thanks for the info Gitanshu !
 
Could you or anyone of this list advice me about the following 
:
 
1)  I  am looking for a Ethernet adapter for a 
desktop computer which is
    (proven) W2000 pro compatible  (and 
not too expensive).
     tested by a list member and on 
Microsoft compatible hardware list. 
 
2)  Off or on the list i would like to share 
expirience/assistence  of installing
     hardware (like HP scanner, CD-RW etc) 
for W2000 pro
     and things like W2000pro and 
networking , VMware.
 
3)  Does anyone know if Sygate Homenetworking is W2000pro 
compatible ?
 
 
Thanks 
 
Theo
 
 
 
 
 
 
<BLOCKQUOTE dir=ltr 
style="PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  <DIV 
  style="BACKGROUND: #e4e4e4; FONT: 10pt arial; font-color: black">From: 
  <A title=onwingsofeagles@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  href="mailto:onwingsofeagles@xxxxxxxxxxxxx";>Gitanshu Buch 
  To: <A title=metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  href="mailto:metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx";>metastock@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Wednesday, February 21, 2001 1:57 
  PM
  Subject: Re: e Signal and MS 7.03
  
  You're always welcome - some corrections / further 
  suggestions, being sent to the listserv in general interest:
   
  a/ I use the word "modem" below, it should alternatively 
  read "router" - the traffic cop that regulates the intra-network flow of 
  stuff. However, there is technology available today - cheap - that can 
  use your existing home phone lines to setup a network, as long as you install 
  the network interface cards on each pc/laptop, the modem will perform the same 
  job of getting connected to the isp & the rest of the intra-network stuff 
  is handled by the operating system. Difference in costs is a couple hundred 
  bucks.
   
  b/ Home networking stuff can be found here - I don't 
  recommend anything specific since everyone's needs vary - suffice it to say 
  that every product below has been used by me at some point in the past few 
  years. Assuming everyone will migrate to broadband (cable/dsl) sooner or 
  later, the better thing to do is to bypass the router and work with solutions 
  that use existing hardware & wiring setups for the network - or go 
  wireless to keep portability intact.
   
  <A 
  href="http://www.intel.com/anypoint/products/wireless/index.htm";>http://www.intel.com/anypoint/products/wireless/index.htm for 
  wireless home networking
   
  <A 
  href="http://www.netopia.com/equipment/products/";>http://www.netopia.com/equipment/products/ for 
  routers
   
  <A 
  href="http://www.3com.com/homeoffice/products/networking.html";>http://www.3com.com/homeoffice/products/networking.html for 
  pc cards recognized/ used universally by most dsl/cable provider 
  software.
   
  All sites also have some self-help guides.
   
  Gitanshu