Mre than likely, yes. I am guessing that it is working, or are you having issues ? -----Original Message----- From: Steve Moffat [mailto:steve@xxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Saturday, April 30, 2005 4:11 PM To: [ISAserver.org Discussion List] Subject: [isalist] RE: Way OT. Can anyone decipher this for me. http://www.ISAserver.org Cool...I thought it was a bit high, I am about 1.5 miles from the mbr though, might that be the factor? S -----Original Message----- From: Paul Nuernberger [mailto:pen@xxxxxxxxx] Sent: Saturday, April 30, 2005 1:37 PM To: ISA Mailing List Subject: [isalist] RE: Way OT. Can anyone decipher this for me. http://www.ISAserver.org In this case, attenuation refers to the amount of signal loss (from an optimum level). It is ordinarily stated in db (decibels). I hope it is some other reference factor (like the percentage less than expected or optimum signal), as a 35 db loss is huge. SNR does indeed mean 'Signal-to-Noise Ratio', but if you look closely they use the term 'SNR Margin'. What they are telling you is the (relative) margin between usable and non-usable signal-to-noise measurement. The higher the number the better, because as the margin approaches zero you have a basically unusable signal (or a SNR of 1:1, which is bad). I doubt that this is in any real-world meaningful measurement unit, but simply an internally derived reference point. Paul Nuernberger -----Original Message----- From: Steve Moffat [mailto:steve@xxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Friday, April 29, 2005 6:31 PM To: [ISAserver.org Discussion List] Subject: [isalist] RE: Way OT. Can anyone decipher this for me. http://www.ISAserver.org Absolutely What I'm really interested in is this bit Attenuation Near End: 35.5 Far End: 11.0 SNR Margin Near End: 21 Far End: 25 -----Original Message----- From: Greg Mulholland [mailto:greg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Friday, April 29, 2005 8:36 PM To: ISA Mailing List Subject: [isalist] RE: Way OT. Can anyone decipher this for me. http://www.ISAserver.org No... I know its running in G.LITE mode, can I go on :) -----Original Message----- From: Steve Moffat [mailto:steve@xxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Saturday, April 30, 2005 9:22 AM To: [ISAserver.org Discussion List] Subject: [isalist] RE: Way OT. Can anyone decipher this for me. http://www.ISAserver.org That just show's how much you know..... -----Original Message----- From: Greg Mulholland [mailto:greg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Friday, April 29, 2005 8:22 PM To: ISA Mailing List Subject: [isalist] RE: Way OT. Can anyone decipher this for me. http://www.ISAserver.org I think it means the adsl line is operational.... -----Original Message----- From: Steve Moffat [mailto:steve@xxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Saturday, April 30, 2005 7:07 AM To: [ISAserver.org Discussion List] Subject: [isalist] Way OT. Can anyone decipher this for me. http://www.ISAserver.org Adsl Line Status OPERATIONAL Adsl Mode G.LITE Up Stream 256 kb (Interleave) Down Stream 1536 kb (Interleave) Attenuation Near End: 35.5 Far End: 11.0 SNR Margin Near End: 21 Far End: 25 HEC Count 0 Firmware 0x43e2eba8 15 min ES Counter 0 CRC Errors 1969 1 day ES Counter 10 Thanks S The correct technical term for haggis stalking is "havering". ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: greg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: isalist@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx The correct technical term for haggis stalking is "havering". ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: greg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: isalist@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx The correct technical term for haggis stalking is "havering". ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: pen@xxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: isalist@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx The correct technical term for haggis stalking is "havering". ------------------------------------------------------ List Archives: http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist ISA Server Newsletter: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/newsletter.asp ISA Server FAQ: http://www.isaserver.org/pages/larticle.asp?type=FAQ ------------------------------------------------------ Other Internet Software Marketing Sites: World of Windows Networking: http://www.windowsnetworking.com Leading Network Software Directory: http://www.serverfiles.com No.1 Exchange Server Resource Site: http://www.msexchange.org Windows Security Resource Site: http://www.windowsecurity.com/ Network Security Library: http://www.secinf.net/ Windows 2000/NT Fax Solutions: http://www.ntfaxfaq.com ------------------------------------------------------ You are currently subscribed to this ISAserver.org Discussion List as: pen@xxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe visit http://www.webelists.com/cgi/lyris.pl?enter=isalist Report abuse to listadmin@xxxxxxxxxxxxx