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Holen

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    Behind you... hah made you look
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    you know the one that grants vision of the outside + penguins

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  1. I don't know why he wouldn't just run the cable inside(using a white cable), that he would run on top of the skirting. That is what most people i know do If done properly it will be invisible, when i say invisible i mean invisible
  2. CCNE after? when you've worked in the business for a long enough while
  3. If you go for a CCENT, you should atleast consider a CCNA. It is difficult, but it is worth it for most people
  4. Yes, there is nothing more satisfying that having 4 months to read up on 10 months worth of stuff. Having to be able to distinguish between OSPF and it's priority system versus other routing protocols. As well as having to do this while working part time, and having subjects such as hacking and scripting... To anyone wondering, the CCNA exam is considered the most difficult beginners certification. if you take the CCENT then the CCNA, you will realize the CCENT is a piece of cake compared(as it covers basically nothing)
  5. So btw, the way steam downloads work when you download quicker than 7MB/s, is that it tries to find a new server with higher speeds if the previous one did not work. This means that you will constantly see the connection speed being anywhere from 5MB/s to 45MB/s to 112MB/s, and it ususally goes up and down all of the time, as you are downloading that quickly...
  6. It sounds like there are permission errors, meaning the ASUSt100tam is not allowed to connect. The printer could be anything, you should write down the error you get
  7. Mark what you wrote is the wrong way around. If the CIDR code is 24, the the first 24 bits in the subnetmask are set. This means that the first three pairs of the IP corresponds to a spesific subnet. If you have an ip of 192.168.0.0/24, then any widget with an ip between 192.168.0.0 and 192.168.0.255 are on the same subnet. Which in turn means there are 32-24=8 available bits for host addresses, though the first and last ip are reserved for the gateway and broadcast addresses.
  8. You could probably set it up with that guide, and for the starting and stopping you could use magic packets and set the power settings to turn of your computer when you have been away for a certain amount of time
  9. If you are on a windows pc, and you are using its standard unzipping tools on a gz file that would be what corrupts the file. Anyways just download the file again, and unzip it with 7-zip, and it should work
  10. If you are trying to say: "is it possible to wirelessly connect my old router to my new router, and connect the pc to the old router" then yes. DDWRT is an open source software, that can run on alot of the more common brands of routers(ASUS, NETGEAR and LINKSYS) are some of the examples. It works really well also, i turned my mothers old NETGEAR N750 into a wifi repeater. It works great and has about 3 times the range of the source router(one of those apple routers with shit range, but storage...) I digress... anyways yes, there are solutions from creating repeaters, or making the old router a network card, though you need to check compatibility at their websites
  11. I would just put on a ping or tracert that runs every 2nd minute, or something of the likes. if you get it you will see it
  12. Yes, in order to diagnose network congestion you would have to put on a constant ping, and see if it drops packets or when it does it. They way they are dropped will tell you if it is network congestion or packet loss(as network congestion will take a long time to react, and most likely respond at some point or not drop that many) while if you have a hardware error creating packet loss, the pc would drop them all at the same time. But i would recommend trying an old router that you know functions(if you have one), or borrow if you need to. Try changing cables to the router(since it happens on more than one computer). And if the problems continues after this, i would call the ISP and tell them the modem has an error. When you do, remember to respond to the phone message they send you afterwards, if they send you one. When i called Telenor telling them that the zyxel p2812 was shit, and that i knew more than 12 neighbours that has to change them every year, and that we really need a new modem. The message i sent responding to the woman on the call(that she lacked experiance, and unfortunatly had no replacement multimodem) they called me back the day after and told me they would send me one for free So remember, if you call your ISP after checking for network congestion and hardware errors on your end. Give them the feedback, and tell them exactly how you feel. ISP's usually want's to keep you for as long as they can, and a 1000 crown modem is usually nothing compared to what you pay them yearly so be honest.
  13. Ohh sorry, i missread. If i were you though i would check to see if it is a hardware based error. You could check it with changing the modem/router, cables and network card. Due to what brwainer said, UDP does not send recieved packets, so it may be packets being dropped. Since you haven't said anything about it, im going to assume that you do not regularly have your pings being dropped(you did write it happened sometimes when you went to random urls). If it is not hardware based, it could mean that one of the nodes on the way to the ISP is congested. Which would be highly unlikely for most places, especially a country like denmark. Which brand of modem/router are you using? I know Telenor's(ISP) last multimodem(zyxel p2812) had manufacturing errors, which is why almost everyone where i lived had to change them once a year or every second year.
  14. According to people that worked in IT before they started their computer engineering bachelors with me, malwarebytes is the best. Though according to a couple of antivirus testing cites, bitdefender is the antivirus with the best overall stats. I use Malwarebytes and bitdefender myself, both work very well
  15. CCNA is a 1 year course i mean if you took it over 2 years i get why it was easy, at our school they told us we could take it over 4 months, which to be honest makes it quite difficult. Also CCNA is said to be the most difficult beginners certificate
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