Linux for beginners

Discussion in 'all things UNIX' started by Krusty, Jul 2, 2016.

  1. Stupendous Man

    Stupendous Man Registered Member

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    Thanks very much, Dave.

    In System Settings\ Network\ Connections\ Edit your Network Connections\ Wired, I see that Allow auto-negotiation is not enabled, Speed is set at 100 Mbit/s, and Duplex is set at Half. Well, that is weird. What is the reason for those settings?
    The Networks item in System Tray says: Connection speed: 1Gitb/s.

    I tried Network Connections setting Allow auto-negotiation enabled, and I tried speed setting 1000 Mbit/s and full-duplex, but that didn't make any difference. Which is no wonder, as my internet speed is not limited by Kubuntu settings, but by my VDSL, as shown in my router, since a couple of weeks or more.

    Anyhow, the Network Connections settings in System Settings and the discrepancy with the readings in System Tray are weird.
     
  2. SAustn2

    SAustn2 Registered Member

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    Sure yvw, I'm sorry the duplex thing didn't help and I hope you can find the cause, If I remember right I only changed the duplex to full but did not change the speed.
     
  3. Stupendous Man

    Stupendous Man Registered Member

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    I see that those Network Connections settings are default for KDE Plasma, also for Neon.
    See Wired connection settings , in the Lifewire article How to Configure Networking in KDE Plasma.
    I don't know why those settings are like that, but it seems default, and I guess it's OK.
     
  4. Stupendous Man

    Stupendous Man Registered Member

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    I migrated to another internet provider. Not only did this fix my internet speed, but also the weird issue of not being able to connect to Distrowatch. I don't know what was broken in my old connection, but all is well with my new connection. Time to go read a few weeks of missed Distrowatch content. :)
     
    Last edited: Jun 14, 2020
  5. Krusty

    Krusty Registered Member

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    Great to hear!

    Thanks for letting us know.
     
  6. Uitlander

    Uitlander Registered Member

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    Albany, CA
    Another option, if one has a tower or mini-tower (with a spare 5.25 bay) is a Syba mobile-rack that allows use of both a SSD, and a regular hard disk. You can use the SSD for Linux, and the regular hard disk for bare-metal backups.
     
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