Sponsorised links
26 October 2009
Free est parvenu à délivrer grâce aux technologies DSL un débit maximum de 174 Mbit/s en réception et 18 Mbit/s en émission
Les équipements DSLAM (Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexeur) de Free sont d’ores et déjà compatibles avec la technologie "F-ADSL", sans aucune modification. Cette technologie permet d’atteindre ces débits sans aucun nouvel investissement réseau. Les Freebox actuelles ne permettent pas l'accès à ces débits. Free n'envisage pas de lancement commercial pour le moment.
22 October 2009
dslreports.com
DSL · Cable · VOIP · Security · Satellite · Fiber · News · Tips · Reviews · Community · Tools
08 June 2009
ADSL no Debian
ADSL NO DEBIAN
Configurar uma conexão adsl (Velox, Speedy etc) no Linux é muito fácil e varia de uma distro para outra. Há distribuições que possuem ferramentas gráficas para tal, como a Kurumin e a Mandriva, mas também é possível configurá-las pelo terminal e é por esse método que vamos fazer a configuração. O procedimento serve tanto para o Ubuntu quanto para as distribuições baseadas no Debian, pelo menos nas que eu testei...
Abra o terminal e digite sem as aspas " sudo pppoeconf " (se você estiver usando o Debian provavelmente será necessário instalar o pacote, digite no terminal " sudo apt-get install pppoeconf " com o cd de instalação no drive), digite a sua senha de usuário e vai aparecer uma janela dizendo que detectou tantas interfaces de rede (eth0, eth1, etc para quantas placas de rede você tenha na máquina) e se você deseja configurar a conexão na interface de rede selecionada e, selecionada a interface de rede onde o modem adsl está conectado, vai aparecer uma janela dizendo que foi detectado o concentrador de acesso (no caso, o modem adsl) e assim ir para a tela de login; digite o seu nome de usuário e senha do seu provedor de acesso e vá dando ENTER e concordando com as perguntas que forem feitas, escolhendo ao final da configuração que você quer que a conexão seja iniciada no boot da máquina. Isso vai permitir que a sua conexão esteja sempre ativa. Reinicie a máquina e pronto, já estará conectado e navegando.
Sponsorised links
03 June 2009
Wired troubleshooting
Wired troubleshooting
If you have a network connection which is not working properly, you can use a few tools to help diagnose what the problem is.
Most of the tools in this section require use of the Terminal, which you can open by pressing Applications → Accessories → Terminal.
Get information about the current connection
ifconfig is intended to allow you to change the settings of your network connections, but it can also be used to list information about the current connection.
1.
Press Applications → Accessories → Terminal to open a Terminal
2.
Type ifconfig eth1 in the Terminal and press Enter, replacing eth1 with the name of your network interface if it is different.
*
inet addr gives the current IP address of the connection
*
HWaddr gives the MAC address of your network device
Chapter 5. Troubleshooting
Table of Contents
Wired troubleshooting
Get information about the current connection
Check if a connection is working properly
Wireless troubleshooting
Check that the device is on
Check for device recognition
Using Windows Wireless Drivers
Check for a connection to the router
Check IP assignment
Check DNS
IPv6 Not Supported
DSL
Ubuntu Documentation > Ubuntu 9.04 > Internet and Networks > Connecting > DSL
DSL
1.
Right click the NetworkManager icon and click Edit connections...
2.
Click DSL.
3.
Click Add.
26 May 2009
06 May 2009
24 April 2009
22 April 2009
29 September 2008
21 September 2008
22 June 2008
03 May 2008
24 February 2008
07 January 2008
26 November 2007
25 November 2007
16 November 2007
15 November 2007
23 October 2007
04 October 2007
18 August 2007
20 June 2007
Damn Small Linux, Download the ISO
If you like Damn Small Linux, please consider donating; even small contributions will help fund its continued development.
Current md5sum:
95383f523ae7a24f9ff085c021ccf11e dsl-3.3.iso
DSL information
DSL is a very versatile 50MB mini desktop oriented Linux distribution.
Damn Small is small enough and smart enough to do the following things:
* Boot from a business card CD as a live linux distribution (LiveCD)
* Boot from a USB pen drive
* Boot from within a host operating system (that's right, it can run *inside* Windows)
* Run very nicely from an IDE Compact Flash drive via a method we call "frugal install"
* Transform into a Debian OS with a traditional hard drive install
* Run light enough to power a 486DX with 16MB of Ram
* Run fully in RAM with as little as 128MB (you will be amazed at how fast your computer can be!)
* Modularly grow -- DSL is highly extendable without the need to customize
