Exactley that is what I want to do. Combine the two to make it look like one interface so I can take advantage of all the bandwidth. On Tuesday 16 May 2006 19:07, you wrote: > On Tue, May 16, 2006 at 06:48:31PM -0700, Nathan England wrote: > > I have 2 cable modems running on seperate connections. It's a shame > > really that both of these are running and I only have 1 pc. It's really a > > shame that said pc has 2 network cards... > > > > What's the easiest way to take advantage of this situation? I used to > > call this shotgunning, but I guess that term hasn't been used in a > > while.. Windows calls it bridging? is that right? > > Are you talking about combining the two connections out into a single > virtual interface? That's fun! > > Bridging is something else. Usually that's meant when you pass traffic > between two different protocols transparently. > > I can't remember what MS calls it, but I know they have it (played with > it a bit at work). OpenBSD has it, too (called trunking). I'm sure Linux > must have it. -- -------------------------------------------------------------- PaysonLinux User Group Community Based Linux Support http://www.paysonlinux.org/ Business Consulting Services, Advanced Network and Server Design, Security Solutions, Process Management and Efficiency Consultations --------------------------------------------------- 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