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Shows the number of clients connected to this system. This does not show users connected to other applications that may be running on this machine (for example, Microsoft Exchange or SQL Server), only the users that have established a Microsoft Networking connection to the system. The current number of Windows Networking sessions open on this machine. A session is defined as a user connection to a Windows Networking resource. For example, a connection to the ADMIN$ and C$ shares on a server by a single users is counted as two sessions. Shows the level of network traffic graphed against a "theoretical" maximum bandwidth for the network card specified. If there are multiple network cards you will want to choose which one to display. See "Select the Network Card" (page 1) for more information. Alarms can be raised in this panel for all network cards in the machine, not only the card displayed. Note: Because of the methods involved in sending data, the actual maximum on an Ethernet network usually is approximately 50% of the theoretical bandwidth. The actual bandwidth can equal the theoretical bandwidth only when using full duplex Ethernet. Token-passing network topologies (including TokenRing and FDDI) enable a theoretical maximum bandwidth much closer to the actual. Represents the rate at which network packets are received by the system from other network systems. Represents the rate at which network packets are being sent from the system to other network systems. |