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2 rechner mit wlan verbinden, Internet über 1. Rechner per Kabel an Kabel-Modem
Begonnen von Bosgu
07. Februar 2010, 13:01:02
« 1 2
Hallo,
ich habe folgendes Problem:

1. PC + W-Lan Karte (Vista), per Kabel am Kabl-Modem (Ohne Wlan) im  Internet

2. PC = Notebook eingebaut W-lan karte

Ich möchte den 2. PC mit dem 1. PC per Wlan verbinden und dann mit dem 2. PC Notebook
über den 1.PC ins Internet.
Leider kann ich keinen Wlan Router verwenden, deswegen diese Idee.

Bin für jeden Tipp/Anleitung dankbar.

Ich habe schon überall gesucht (google usw.), aber alle Lösungen sind nur mit Router oder
Notebook per Wlan im Internet.

installationinstallation neuenneuen offlineoffline windowswindows ubuntuubuntu vistavista softwaresoftware machenmachen machinemachine keinkein hilfehilfe rechnerrechner winxpwinxp forumforum 6196592861965928 per wlan arbeitenper wlan arbeiten internettinternett c200c200 7403565374035653 win7 und per wlan verbindenwin7 und per wlan verbinden rouerrouer zugreifenzugreifen d24d24 wlan modem win pcs verbindenwlan modem win pcs verbinden leitungenleitungen gefundengefunden bggbgg per kabel wlan router anschliessenper kabel wlan router anschliessen netzkabelnetzkabel programmprogramm
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Windows Update versus Ubuntu Update
Begonnen von gdi
16. Juli 2008, 02:57:58
A few months ago, Steve Ballmer publicly noted that Windows Vista was “a work in progress.” That inspired a predictable outpouring of Vista-bashing. After all, look how many updates Windows Vista has had since it was first released. Obviously, it was a disaster, or there would have been no need for that many updates, right? Why couldn’t Microsoft get it right the first time?

The reality? All modern operating systems used as mainstream business and consumer platforms are “works in progress” and require frequent updates to fix bugs and resolve security issues (and occasionally to add features). Many of those bugs and security issues don’t surface until the code gets deployed widely, and even then it sometimes takes detective work to figure out where the actual problem is. Presumably, the big issues get worked out within a few months, and the pace of updates drops off (but not to zero).

I thought about this over the weekend when I opened up a Hyper-V virtual machine running Ubuntu Linux 8.04. This was a plain-vanilla install of Ubuntu, with no additional software except what is included with the downloaded distro. I had last used this VM 51 days earlier, at which point the OS release was about a month old. At that time, it was completely current with patches and updates, and I hadn’t reopened it since. (A side note: My Ubuntu and OpenSUSE 11 installations on this Hyper-V server were exceptionally easy and performance is excellent. I’ll be migrating my Fedora installation from Virtual PC 2007 to Hyper-V and adding an OpenBSD machine on this platform as well.)

I expected that I would have to install a few updates. But I was surprised to see how many.

Kompletter Artikel auf Englisch unter: http://blogs.zdnet.com/Bott/?p=496