On 2003/01/07 15:15, Shachar Shemesh wrote:
> The major advantage the sofaware/check point S-Box has over a linux
> computer (and, for that matter, all integrated solutions) is the lack of
> a rotating cooling device. This can be worth the money and lack of
> control if you happen to host your int
Ira Abramov wrote:
if you want to invest some more (as a business owner) there are boxes
with a crippled FW1, virus check and other features from $400 to $1400,
and they actually run embeded linux.
If wer'e going to plug a commercial product, at least get the price
range correctly. The sofa
Quoting mnna4, from the post of Tue, 07 Jan:
> I agree. It seems that the non-pro model has a limited memory.
> The situation is even worse with the cable modems.
> The solution is to spend ~250$ on multi-function devices which give you
> NAT, FW, switch and Wi-Fi or half of the price without Wi-Fi
that (except Wi-Fi) is
most
plausable. ( This a Linux list, isn't it :) )
- Original Message -
From: "Shachar Shemesh" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Maxim Kryachko" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 07, 2003 11:15 AM
Performing NAT translations require a state table. It appears from your
post that Alcatel's state table is 256 entries deep. As I'm guessing
that had you bought the real Alcatel Pro modem, you would have contacted
Alcatel's tech support, and the fact that you are contacting us means
you bought
Hi list,
I realize this is an offtopic on this list, but maybe someone could help me.
I use Alcatel ADSL modem
acting as NAT router. Recently I found out that it has limit of 256 open TCP/UDP
connections.
Alcatel documentation I found
on Internet does not contain any information on how t