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Dear Adam,
cross-over cables are only required for really old machines. For a few
years, RJ-45 plugs have been able to figure out automatically whether
they are connected to a switch or directly to another machine.
Best,
Tim
On 01/25/2013 10:40 AM,
You can just connect two machines together with an ethernet cable, no switches
or
routers. However you need a crossover cable to do this. Most likely you have
standard
cables only in the lab.
AdamĀ
Note that you'll need a crossover rather than a straight through serial
cable and probably a DB25 to DS9 adaptor, but once you get your hands on
the cable this is a straightforward solution.
kmj
On Wed, Jan 23, 2013 at 5:49 PM, Johan Hattne wrote:
> On 23 Jan 2013, at 16:07, Dave Roberts wrote
On 01/24/2013 03:19 AM, James Stroud wrote:
It seems like the problem is that the Indigo has an IP address that is not part
of the subnet that it is on, so this makes network access impossible. Is this
correct?
If so, you can just spoof the proper subnet in isolation. You can run dd-wrt on
a
It seems like the problem is that the Indigo has an IP address that is not part
of the subnet that it is on, so this makes network access impossible. Is this
correct?
If so, you can just spoof the proper subnet in isolation. You can run dd-wrt on
a compatible router and assign any subnet you wa
On 23 Jan 2013, at 16:07, Dave Roberts wrote:
> Anyway, we have an old Indigo SGI that runs our NMR. It's a console only
> system, and we access it via the network from another old SGI (toaster model
> - blue). The console does not have a video card (nor space for one), so I
> can't plug in
Hi all,
By the way, thanks for all the suggestions on the linux versions. I
went against my better judgement and just stuck with Fedora, mainly
because I'm familiar with it. I have to admit, I kind of like it. I was
able to get it up and running, run nfs to mount local drives, and
install a