I hate windows networking.

notfred

Lifer
Feb 12, 2001
38,241
4
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Windows networking just lost a 4GB file on me. I was transferring it to my laptop, about 75% done, and then the little "network cable unplugged" thing came up in the taskbar, my transfer died, and my 4GB file was now a 10mb file.

I nearly beat the PC to death. Fvcking thing.... I want to kill it. :|
 

Hoober

Diamond Member
Feb 9, 2001
4,417
62
91
Originally posted by: notfred
If only the internet was as fast as a LAN...

Of course, I still find 8 minutes to be too long to wait... I'm so spoiled.

What, you have something that'll transfer that faster?
 

her209

No Lifer
Oct 11, 2000
56,336
11
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Originally posted by: Kenazo
come on gigabit... :)
Too much overhead.

Besides, theoretically, you should be able to transfer 1GB in 8 secs on a gigabit conn. However, like I said, overhead + hdd limitation.

Firewire, maybe???
 

Kenazo

Lifer
Sep 15, 2000
10,429
1
81
and completely unnecessary for most applications. I'm contemplating going gigabit for my home network. :) The cards can be had for $50 cdn a piece, just patch my two computers together and then have a 10/100 nic in one of them if i want to add any other computers (like friends)
 

UNCjigga

Lifer
Dec 12, 2000
25,594
10,293
136
WTF??? How does Windows Networking "lose" a file? What version of Windows? I've had severed net connections many times when transferring files (we need to reset router to get the print server working...dad does this without asking...) and I've never lost the source file...EVAR. Even if you're doing a 'move' and not a copy...it won't delete the source until after the last packet of the file is sent and verified.
 

notfred

Lifer
Feb 12, 2001
38,241
4
0
Originally posted by: uncJIGGA
WTF??? How does Windows Networking "lose" a file? What version of Windows? I've had severed net connections many times when transferring files (we need to reset router to get the print server working...dad does this without asking...) and I've never lost the source file...EVAR. Even if you're doing a 'move' and not a copy...it won't delete the source until after the last packet of the file is sent and verified.

Whatever version of windows networking windows 2000 uses. The file was over 4GB when I started, and 10MB after the connection failure.
 

Descartes

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
13,968
2
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So... the transfer was hosed somehow and you blame windows networking? That little "network cable unplugged" notification is tied in with the hardware; blame your cable/NIC/drivers.
 

Descartes

Lifer
Oct 10, 1999
13,968
2
0
Originally posted by: notfred
Originally posted by: uncJIGGA
WTF??? How does Windows Networking "lose" a file? What version of Windows? I've had severed net connections many times when transferring files (we need to reset router to get the print server working...dad does this without asking...) and I've never lost the source file...EVAR. Even if you're doing a 'move' and not a copy...it won't delete the source until after the last packet of the file is sent and verified.

Whatever version of windows networking windows 2000 uses. The file was over 4GB when I started, and 10MB after the connection failure.

Were both boxes win2k?
 

notfred

Lifer
Feb 12, 2001
38,241
4
0
Originally posted by: Descartes
So... the transfer was hosed somehow and you blame windows networking? That little "network cable unplugged" notification is tied in with the hardware; blame your cable/NIC/drivers.

I'm not mad cause my transfer died. I'm mad cause windows lost 4GB of data.


And one bow was a win2k machine, the other was an OS X machine.
 

dman

Diamond Member
Nov 2, 1999
9,110
0
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That sucks. So, you were xferring from Windows to OSX, cable came out of OSX box and file was lost on Windows box?

Anyway, when I transfer a lot of data like that I use copy, verify it's good on other side manually, and then delete from source afterwards. If I use move, I generally don't care if the data goes bah by.
 

GeekDrew

Diamond Member
Jun 7, 2000
9,099
19
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And one bow was a win2k machine, the other was an OS X machine.

I have NEVER had any problem with windows networking after it was properly set up. And furthermore, not once have I ever receieved a message that the network cable was unplugged when it was not unplugged (or the device on the other end of the cable shut down).

Drew
 

notfred

Lifer
Feb 12, 2001
38,241
4
0
Originally posted by: dman
That sucks. So, you were xferring from Windows to OSX, cable came out of OSX box and file was lost on Windows box?

Anyway, when I transfer a lot of data like that I use copy, verify it's good on other side manually, and then delete from source afterwards. If I use move, I generally don't care if the data goes bah by.

The cable didn't physically come out of anything. I think the network card in the windows box is bad, and that's why I got the message. And I didn't use move, I was copying it. It got lost anyway.
 

PowerMacG5

Diamond Member
Apr 14, 2002
7,701
0
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Originally posted by: notfred
Originally posted by: dman That sucks. So, you were xferring from Windows to OSX, cable came out of OSX box and file was lost on Windows box? Anyway, when I transfer a lot of data like that I use copy, verify it's good on other side manually, and then delete from source afterwards. If I use move, I generally don't care if the data goes bah by.
The cable didn't physically come out of anything. I think the network card in the windows box is bad, and that's why I got the message. And I didn't use move, I was copying it. It got lost anyway.

I have never lost a file transferring from Windows. I routinely transfer 20+ GB of data and never lost a byte.

EDIT: I transfer from Windows XP to Windows Server 2003 Enterprise or Windows 2k AS.
 

FracturedSoul

Member
May 14, 2003
152
0
0
If you think the NIC is bad then replace it, they ain't that expensive. It ain't windows fault your damned NIC went bad, don't blame the OS 'cause your card dies.