On Thu, 3 Jul 2003, Paul Taylor wrote: > Horizontal run cable is not patch and might be crossover. > Patch cable is braided for more flexibility. > Horizontal run cable is solid core for better impedance. > Crossover pertains to certain pairs swapped and is independent of patch or > horizontal cable. > > Read EIA/TIA 568A or 568B standards for more information. Again, not to be a smartass or anything but "reading the standards" in this case involves shelling out $360 (CD) or $460 (paper): http://global.ihs.com/search_res.cfm?RID=TIA&INPUT_DOC_NUMBER=TIA%2FEIA%2D568 Pretty steep, considering that the original post was about wiring up a DSL modem* in a house. [*] Yes, I saw the earlier rant on the word "modem." It's easier to say than "ethernet-to-atm-plus-ppp-and-or-ethernet-bridge-no-wait-i-meant-router." > -----Original Message----- > From: owner-kclug@marauder.illiana.net > [mailto:owner-kclug@marauder.illiana.net]On Behalf Of Jason Clinton > Sent: Thursday, July 03, 2003 1:26 PM > To: Gerald Combs > Cc: kclug > Subject: Re: Networking DSL/Cabling Issues > > > Gerald Combs wrote: > > On Thu, 3 Jul 2003, Jason Clinton wrote: > > Essentially, you're making things more complicated than they are. There > are only two types of ethernet cables: patch or crossover. For this type > > Not to be a smartass or anything, but is thinwire (10base2) straight > through or crossover? What about 1000baseFX? :) > > *bows to the master* > > I stand corrected. > > > -- > Just my three trits. > 7A81 0A2F 1ABE DC38 DABC 7C22 B2EE 2304 4A89 46BF >