You will need a Dual WAN port router. Most manufacturers make them these days..
D-Link DI-LB604 is one
Netgear FVS124G is one
When connected and configured they will automatically "split" local IP traffice between the available DSL lines and keep the internet traffic "even" between the two lines.
They aren't to hard to setup but it can be confusing. I personnaly think the Dlink was easier to setup.
I even have these setup with DSL on one side and Cable on the other.. that way even if one fails the other usually keeps working.
2007-06-03 01:59:21
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answer #1
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answered by Tracy L 7
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Yes, just get a router with 2 WAN ports and configure it for load balancing. They don't both have to be with the same ISP.
2007-06-03 00:15:45
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answer #2
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answered by David R 2
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each gadget you upload to a similar community source will sluggish somewhat. additionally multi pages engaged on same browser on same device. a mix of the two slows much extra. the two doing same for the duration of " top hours" even slower. upload some one leaching yor wifi sig and you could as nicely have dialup. an epidemic has a tendency to electrify in a distinctive way. extra like freezing , eating classes apps, and data. you could " sparkling up" via deleting cookies, history, boost volume of reminiscence used via web content, and attempt to not have extra advantageous than one tab " working" at as quickly as. enable one end until now commencing yet another. one extra for now. Set startup classes. do away with getting stuff working in history you're actually not utilising on the time. in case you play arond plenty with the buttons then you definately can decide the thank you to try this with out one extra application, yet they seem to be a available. This additionally provides speedier startup.
2016-12-18 12:21:34
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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If they are with the same ISP, and that ISP supports load balancing, then yes. Otherwise, no.
2007-06-02 22:19:01
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answer #4
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answered by ? 7
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