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Originally Posted by RAOVQ
i have never heard of anyone intentionally using a crossover cable to connect a computer to a router. hell, many routers (like the one you mentioned) come with automatic detection so you can use whatever cable you feel like.
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No, many HOME routers come with automatic detection. Home routers are MAYBE capable of RIP, if you're lucky. Forget about BGP.
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ive ran simple home networks a number of times and i have never once touched a crossover cable for anything other than computer to computer and occasionally router to router.
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Well, here's you're problem: you've only run simple home networks. You will never touch a real router in simple home networking. The thing you buy in a box at Best Buy that says "router" is not so much a router as it is a switch. Take a networking course; you'll understand.
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instead of trying to sort through your post (i cannot find any reference anywhere to e0/0, what is it supposed to be?), how about you just provide some kind of link. ive checked myself now, and the only time you use crossovers is between two switches (or hubs or whatever) and between two computers. since niether of those apply to the situation at hand, im wondering what you are on about.
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I am on about everything I've ever learned when I was studying for my CCNA exam, and everything I had to do on the practicals. I have connected routers (as in machines that you would use to route traffic between VLANs or as a border router on a corporate network) to computers, and when you use a straight-through cable, guess what? Doesn't work. I would say "trust me, I'm a CCNA", but that would be a blatant appeal to authority.
Do you know about the OSI model? Computers are layer 3 devices, and so are routers, so as a rule, you need a crossover cable between them. This is not the case for NICs with automatic selection, as many present-day cards have, but for older NICs, a crossover cable is necessary.