 Underplay
join:2003-10-19 Tacoma, WA
| reply to battleop Re: What...the...hell?
said by battleop :I recently had a customer tell me that at his house he could see 6 wireless networks with 6Mb Comcast connections. He said he had bonded them together to get a "T3" speed. I looked at him and said "Riiiiigggghhhtttt" and went back to what I was doing. That's funny that you said that.
When I was living in Pullman there were wireless WEP connections everywhere.
I used aircrack-ng to crack about 10 of them, then I bought ANOTHER wireless USB lan card which used the rt61 chipset.
I then configured my Linux kernel running SUSE 10.2 with iptables and the proper modules, which was hard to do because most of the modules were out dated and there was no new documentation on them.
I set up my main chain to switch interfaces every 2 connections.
After all of the kernel stuff was setup, i then setup firefox to use pipeling which would utilize both connections.
THEN, the fun part I used my usenet client to max out both connections...
Now this took me about a week on top of a full time job, and it wasn't easy. But I did manage to combine the connections together and it worked only with limited protocols that supported multiple connections.
The point of my story, its definitely possible, but not in the way most people realize. |
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  battleop
join:2005-09-28 00000
| reply to patcat88 I recently had a customer tell me that at his house he could see 6 wireless networks with 6Mb Comcast connections. He said he had bonded them together to get a "T3" speed. I looked at him and said "Riiiiigggghhhtttt" and went back to what I was doing. |
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 patcat88
join:2002-04-05 Jamaica, NY | reply to battleop If your 1337 you can use a VPN that splits traffic over 2 IPs, and recombines the data at the VPN server where it goes out to the internet as 1 IP. |
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  Tzale Proud Libertarian Conservative Premium join:2004-01-06 Sweden
·Verizon FIOS
·Optimum Online
| reply to battleop said by battleop :You can't bond them unless both ends create a multilink. What you are talking about ends up being a load balanced connection. Exactly. |
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  battleop
join:2005-09-28 00000 | reply to rahvin112 You can't bond them unless both ends create a multilink. What you are talking about ends up being a load balanced connection. |
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 rahvin112
join:2002-05-24 Sandy, UT | reply to Tzale Actually, you can. There are number of linux tools that allow you to line bond two connections and make them "one". |
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