Well done!
You have made alot of people happy tonight!
You have made alot of people happy tonight!
<-------- A very happy forum member.
Cool, you got it going.
I hope you're not mixing up ethernet over fiber (using transceivers), FDDI and ATM. They all use more or less the same medium (fiber) but the protocol layer is of course totally incompatible so you can't mix them.
And as Jan said, switches will also be hot and noisy.
anyone having those 4MB 80ns SIMMs it takes and willing to part with them?
nekonoko wrote:pentium wrote: Oh dear, this is getting a bit out of hand.
I just assumed that so long as I stuck to the ethernet protocol while using fiber I would be fine.
FDDI and optical fibre fast ethernet are not the same thing.
To quote a wise man on the first page of this thread:
jan-jaap wrote: I hope you're not mixing up ethernet over fiber (using transceivers), FDDI and ATM. They all use more or less the same medium (fiber) but the protocol layer is of course totally incompatible so you can't mix them.
To complicate things further, getting good drivers for IRIX systems is a challenge, even with SGI-made network interfaces (the old Challenge L/XL ATM cards, for example). You'll often find cards that only have IRIX 6.2 drivers, or 6.3 drivers, or 6.4 drivers, or even 5.3 drivers, and for cards that have 6.5 drivers, they often have serious glitches.
josehill wrote:pentium wrote: The latch that holds my DUO book 230 to the mini dock jammed and one of the arms broke off when I tried to free it. Now I can't get a reliable connection and it looks like it's time to upgrade. Anyone have a spare DUO Dock lying around?
You might try posting a WTB at the Low End Mac Swap List - http://groups.google.com/group/lemswap
If you are looking for pure-power in a Mac , go for an Intel
tillin9 wrote: Um... Why not just put a copper GBIC into a regular Fibre hub? Something like this: http://cgi.ebay.com/New-Finisar-1000BAS ... dZViewItem
Did you realize you need a motherboard with a dozen PCI slots in the server?
The Keeper wrote: What is "Fiber Over Ethernet"?
If you're referencing "10Base-FL"/"100Base-FL"/"1000Base-FL" or some other variation on that theme, where it's a standard Ethernet stack that just happens to be using a fiber optic transport, then it's more accurate to say "Ethernet Over Fiber". That's relatively straightforward to set up, since most hubs/switches that expose fibre optic ethernet links also have copper ethernet links to connect to the rest of the network.