trikster2,
>Can any windows OS support jumbo frames?
I don't do Windows, I really don't know. My GUESS is that 2K/XP can, and older versions are solidly a who-knows. Older than 2K/XP the network stack probably isn't going to be able to deliver nearly as good performance anyway. I do know that recent gigabit performance demos MS has done have used jumbo frames because without them it can't deliver enough performance, so they're doing it somehow.
>Also did you look at the $130 linksys switch? Does it support jumbo frames?
No, I didn't. I saw the Hawking announcement at CES (?) and then a month later when they hit the street, grabbed one. The Linksys product came later and I really don't know what it is and isn't capable of. My guess is that it can't do jumbo frames, but 1504 it might or might not. The low end switches pretty well support the minimum number of features necessary to comply with the standards, and not always even that much.
Remember, jumbo frames are not required by the standard, they're a vendor extension, that basically all NIC vendors and higher-end switch vendors support in some flavor or other (the actual jumbo limit varies, but circa 8k they can all do). The low end guys are new to the game and probably are doing the most minimal job possible. And I'd be more upset about this, but, you know what? That's exactly how they get it so cheap. If I were buying a gigabit switch costing a few thousand $$, I'd set totally different standards, but for $80, you get what you pay for - no more, and hopefully no less!