Dne 12.11.2014 v 13:40 Miroslav Suchý napsal(a):
> On 11/09/2014 12:20 PM, Peter Robinson wrote:
>> There is means of doing this. For Wired -> Wireless there's relatively
>> straight forward ways to deal with it but you need to have support for
>> the handover across the entire network infrastructu
On 11/09/2014 12:20 PM, Peter Robinson wrote:
There is means of doing this. For Wired -> Wireless there's relatively
straight forward ways to deal with it but you need to have support for
the handover across the entire network infrastructure, it's not really
something the host does on it's own.
Dne 8.11.2014 v 14:23 Björn Persson napsal(a):
> Tomasz Torcz wrote:
>> On Fri, Nov 07, 2014 at 03:37:53PM +0100, Björn Persson wrote:
>>> Vít Ondruch wrote:
* I don't understand why my Xchat should loose connection, when I
am switching from ethernet to WiFi (and they are both available
nection is just implementation detail, so why
> this does not work? If there is possible to create some virtual network
> interface, which would take all the real network connection under one
> umbrella, this should be default for Fedora Workstation.
>
> Additional feature could be th
Tomasz Torcz wrote:
>On Fri, Nov 07, 2014 at 03:37:53PM +0100, Björn Persson wrote:
>> Vít Ondruch wrote:
>> > * I don't understand why my Xchat should loose connection, when I
>> > am switching from ethernet to WiFi (and they are both available
>> > during interim period).
>>
>> For this use cas
On Fri, Nov 07, 2014 at 03:37:53PM +0100, Björn Persson wrote:
> Vít Ondruch wrote:
> > * I don't understand why my Xchat should loose connection, when I am
> > switching from ethernet to WiFi (and they are both available during
> > interim period).
>
> For this use case you want to run IRC over
Vít Ondruch wrote:
> * I don't understand why my Xchat should loose connection, when I am
> switching from ethernet to WiFi (and they are both available during
> interim period).
For this use case you want to run IRC over SCTP, so that you can keep
the connection open when you change IP addresses
g.
a TCP) and these include network address (e.g. an IP). And network
addresses in the current Internet are used as locators, thus they
depend on the network topology.
> The type of network connection is just implementation detail, so why
> this does not work? If there is possible to create some
Fi (and they are both available during
> interim period).
>
> The type of network connection is just implementation detail, so why
> this does not work? If there is possible to create some virtual network
> interface, which would take all the real network connection under one
> umbrella,
o why
this does not work? If there is possible to create some virtual network
interface, which would take all the real network connection under one
umbrella, this should be default for Fedora Workstation.
Additional feature could be that WiFi goes down when Ethernet is
available etc. This functionalit
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