Kevin Brown wrote: > I saw in another thread that a Netgear DG814 DSL modem can be used > with Qwest DSL in place of a Cisco 678 or the internal PCI Intel 2200 > card. My question is, I have two DSL feeds coming into my house > (don't ask). Currently one connects to an EOL Cisco 675 DSL Router > and the other goes straight into a Windows box (Internal PCI Modem). > I've tried using the 675 in place of the Internal card, but apparently > in the time between getting the first line and then the second (about > 1.5 years) they changed protocols and so the 675 doesn't work on the > newer line (even with the most recent CBOS). Would the afformentioned > Netgear DSL modem work for both protocols? I don't need it to support > both lines at once, just want one piece of hardware that will work for > either line as needed. This would let me convert the machine with the > Intel card to Linux and still be able to use both lines from my > network (hmm, Linux router doing load balancing???). Kevin; Qwest has always offered either internal modems or external modem/routers. The Cisco 675 is a "CAP" encoded external modem/router and was provided with CAP encoded circuits. Later Qwest started providing all new service with "DMT" encoded lines and for their external modem/router provided the Cisco 678, which can via different CBOS Types (CAP, DMT, or DMT Lite) operate with all three encoding methods. The modem /router you would need to support both CAP, and DMT encoding is not available as far as I know. All new Qwest installs are using a different external DMT modem since the Cisco modems have been declared EOL (end of life) by Cisco. Art Wagner. > > --------------------------------------------------- > PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us > To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change you mail settings: > http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss > >