Wireless would work if you got antenna's that where point to point, insted of omni. Also you could also use a Cat5E cable, that was put in some kinda conduit like a PVC pipe to make the distance. Since Cat5E can go upto around 330 feet.
Cat5 and Cat5E can go upto 100 meters, or about 330 feet. One thing that you may want to look into, is to see if the cable is near any thing in the attic that could be putting out nasty Electro Magnetic Feilds. Which could cause distortion of the data on the wire. Which would make the PC and...
Odds are they would maybe send warning letters, or worse. Cut the service tottally off. And also cable TV and Internet use the same medium. When they do a proper setup they split the line so that part goes to TV and the other half to Internet. I would suggest not hanging Internet off the line...
Thats the pain of ISDN, its very expensive. And one reason ISDN was never took off for end users/companys and the telco's. And have you tryed searching Ebay for used telco equipment?
Leave the router to do its job, but offload the function of DHCP to something like a Linux box or Windows 200x Server box. Then disable the DHCP server on the linksys. And your linksys should perform better.
I never got mine restored. But it was no big deal because I just do everything via the CLI now. I read a cisco guide on how to upgrade/restore it but as I said it did not work. And if you can do the CLI I am sure things will be fine.
Usually when mounting servers directly into a rack it is good to have four posts. Although at work we found away around that with a two post by putting in selves. Then putting the server on the shelf. That way it is not hanging onto the rack by its ears, but sitting balanced in the rack nicely.
There is a way to stop them from doing that, but I don't rember off the top of my head.
And with the NAT taking the cable, I think it may be taking if because of the ethernet interfaces better bandwith. s0 = 1.5 Mbps e0 = 10 Mbps in the routers logic. Not sure how this would make things...
If they are on the same subnet within the school, then they may able to have one computer host the printer then the other one access it over the network via simple windows sharing.
NAT on IOS is not to hard. It can just be real picky. Here is the basic commands to get it to run.
On the outside interfaces you want to use the ip nat outside command. On the inside you want to use the ip nat inside command. Then at the global config level you want to enter the ip nat...
E-mail applications are downright scary when it comes to configuring them. (Even just for basic use.) Ive not touched trying to set one up yet, mainly due to the fact of how little I need it compared to how much time it will take me to setup.
X is very picky on what video hardare it wants to run on. Most of the time if video hardware does not play you have two options. 1.Command Line or 2. Tweaking settings till X drives you insane. With a slim chance of getting lucky and having it work.
Most of the open source applications have some really good manual pages, as well as web documentation. Also I find that many articles as well as books put out by O'Reilly are very detailed and priceless as far as information about many *nix/nux and open source applications go. Another great...
Load balancing will work with the two internet connections. But not in the fashion that you are trying to go about it. The reason being is that, in order to route packets the router has to have routes for the two internet connections. In order to get the routes for both internet connections...