Yes, a hub will work at different speeds, there are such things as 10/100 
hubs. However, what hubs will not do is run at full duplex. Hubs are striclty 
half duplex. 

-Jeremy


On Monday 19 November 2001 05:00, you wrote:
> What are you connecting them with? You are usually restricted by the
> hub/switch that you use. Most switches allow for different speeds on
> different ports. This doesn't mean that the same wire is using both, but
> rather each connection to the switch is running at a different speed. (10
> or 100) My switch has leds that tell me what each port is set to.
>
> AFAIK, a hub won't work at 2 different speeds.
>
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2001, Mike Bresnahan wrote:
> > Could someone explain to me in a nutshell how 10mb and 100mb co-exist
> > happily on the same ethernet?  For example, I have 3PCs and a DSL modem
> > on my local network.  1 PC and the modem have 10mb cards and 2 of the PCs
> > have 100mb cards.  When I transfer a file from one of the 100mb machines
> > it takes about 5 times less time than when I transfer to the 10mb
> > machine, so it certainly appears that the network is capable of both
> > speeds.  Evidently the 10mb is able to detect and handle collisions with
> > the 100mb and vice versa. Perhaps it's because they both use the same
> > carrier frequency; if they use such a thing?  Also, is a 5x speed
> > difference what I should expect?  Not 10x?
> >
> > Take pity on me.  I'm a software guy.
> >
> > Mike
> >
> >
> >
> > _______________________________________________
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>
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