Hi everyone The first thing I would like to say is thank you all very much for your suggestions. I've tryed various different types of cable and played around with the settings using ethtool, but to no avail. I think the writings on the wall for me to use the other laptop that already works. I just thought that there might be some easy solution to the problem (which there might be, but I think its going to take me a long time for me to find it). Its been interesting though and slightly frustrating, but at least I have got a solution(use the other laptop). THANKS AGAIN Phil On Wednesday 12 December 2007 13:00, William Hooper wrote: > On Dec 11, 2007 9:15 PM, Tim <ignored_mailbox@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Tue, 2007-12-11 at 12:00 -0500, William Hooper wrote: > > > If it is indeed a cross-over cable, maybe the device is expecting a > > > straight through cable? > > > > The standard is a straight through cable for things that are supposed to > > be connected together (e.g. computer to a switch or hub) and cross-overs > > to things being directly connected together that would normally go > > through something else (e.g. computers directly together). > > Agreed. However, you will occasionally run across a device that has > an Ethernet port for diagnostics purposes that is designed to plug > directly into a computer using a straight through cable. Since the > best description we have is "old system", I thought that changing > cables would be worth a test. It's not like it is going to cause > damage or cost anything. > > It will be interesting to see the results of Phil's attempts. > Hopefully one of the suggestions in this thread will help him out. > > -- > William Hooper -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list