F flipflop Beta member Messages 2 Sep 1, 2006 #1 My ISP status often stalls. It shows that my modem is sending bytes, but it is not receiving bytes. This goes on until I disconect and reconnect. What could this be from? Could it be a virus or something?
My ISP status often stalls. It shows that my modem is sending bytes, but it is not receiving bytes. This goes on until I disconect and reconnect. What could this be from? Could it be a virus or something?
Law Fully Optimized Messages 4,200 Location the data closet Sep 1, 2006 #2 Don't know until you provide a bit more information about your network and computer.
OP OP F flipflop Beta member Messages 2 Sep 1, 2006 #3 This might help? TCP/IP Internet protocol. 56k connection. General Configuration - Maximum speed - 115200: is this suitable for my 56k modem? All three following checked. Enable Hardware flow control Enable Modem error control Enable Modem compression Options - just normal settings. "X25" Nothing checked. Security "Typical" is checked - no other boxes checked. Networking "This connection uses the following items" Internet Protocol with a tick QOS Packet scheduler shaded with a tick. None of the advanced PPP settings are checked.
This might help? TCP/IP Internet protocol. 56k connection. General Configuration - Maximum speed - 115200: is this suitable for my 56k modem? All three following checked. Enable Hardware flow control Enable Modem error control Enable Modem compression Options - just normal settings. "X25" Nothing checked. Security "Typical" is checked - no other boxes checked. Networking "This connection uses the following items" Internet Protocol with a tick QOS Packet scheduler shaded with a tick. None of the advanced PPP settings are checked.
E evelmunkey In Runtime Messages 319 Sep 2, 2006 #4 I am not sure why your connection is failing, but it is sending because ti is trying to reconnect. In order to connect, it has to send requests, which takes up bytes.
I am not sure why your connection is failing, but it is sending because ti is trying to reconnect. In order to connect, it has to send requests, which takes up bytes.