/where the problem is.
Eventually one gets it narrowed to exactly what/where it
is, at which point the fix is generally obvious, or one
isolates it to so-and-so's or such-and-such's responsibility,
and then they can fix their broken portion.
From: "Christian Einfeldt"
Subjec
Thanks to everyone who replied to this thread. I am going to be going back
to the homeless shelter soon, and I will update everyone after following
the suggestions given in this thread. Thanks!
On Fri, Jun 24, 2016 at 8:31 PM, Mark Weisler
wrote:
> Hi Christian,
> I'm intentionally top posting
Hi Christian,
I'm intentionally top posting...
As a general practice, you want to engage in "bracketing" to try to isolate
your networking problem.
You know that you have a problem all the way out at the end computer in the
lobby.
Now you want to take a notebook computer to the "first place" yo
Hi Aleksander,
Thanks, that was really helpful!
Anyone else have any thoughts? For example, I am able to run speedtest at
home, but not at the homeless shelter, using the same machine and the same
cable. Just very strange.
On Fri, Jun 24, 2016 at 12:34 PM, Aleksander Vadnjal
wrote:
> For Goo
For Google I got 0 packet loss and my time is approx 15ms.
Check that your Ethernet cables are 100%, see if sockets are OK too. You
should not loose no packets. That is just too bogus. Let me know. Also try
wifi and see there might be a switch that is malfunctioning.
On Jun 24, 2016 12:20 PM, "Chri
Hi,
Here are my questions:
1. Why did my speed tests fail in this situation?
2. Are the ping speeds normal for this situation?
3. What diagnostic tests can I run to isolate the slowness on this
system?
As most people on this list know, Partimus is volunteering for a low income
housin