[comp.protocols.tcp-ip.ibmpc] Ethernet

MKREYCHE@KENTVM.KENT.EDU (Michael Kreyche) (04/04/91)

The other day David L. Cohen said:

> I understand TCP/IP and Netware single-adapter coexistence on
> ethernet fairly well.

If you will pardon a new subscriber, this is what I'm interested in
learning.  If anyone can point me to previous postings, published
material, etc., I would appreciate it.  My network administrator and
I are interested in connecting our LAN to the campus network and
being able to telnet and ftp across the internet without having to
log off the Netware server--preferably under Windows 3.  Are we
dreaming, or is this something that is feasible now?

By the way, we just installed 3.11 but are not clear on what the
TCP/IP support built into it is capable of doing for us.

nelson@sun.soe.clarkson.edu (Russ Nelson) (04/09/91)

In article <9104041500.aa28559@louie.udel.edu> MKREYCHE@KENTVM.KENT.EDU (Michael Kreyche) writes:

   My network administrator and I are interested in connecting our LAN
   to the campus network and being able to telnet and ftp across the
   internet without having to log off the Netware server--preferably
   under Windows 3.  Are we dreaming, or is this something that is
   feasible now?

No, you're not dreaming.  You need the Clarkson collection of packet
drivers, the BYU shell, and CUTCP, or some other TCP/IP package
(nearly all of which support packet drivers).  Fetch:

sun.soe.clarkson.edu:pub/ka9q/driverss.zip
sun.soe.clarkson.edu:pub/novell/novell.exe
sun.soe.clarkson.edu:pub/cutcp/cutcp.zoo

and read the enclosed documentation in them...

--
--russ <nelson@clutx.clarkson.edu> I'm proud to be a humble Quaker.
It's better to get mugged than to live a life of fear -- Freeman Dyson
I joined the League for Programming Freedom, and I hope you'll join too.