Which increases your internet connections and gives you a memory leak. Though, server maybe unlimited, I believe you would have to purchase the number of CALs that the server can use. Of course the above is a shady or perhaps illegal way to circumvent this.
Not sure on that. As far as I can remember, XP and 2k is basically the same on this. But I do know for a fact that for inbound connections, XP pro is limited to 10 connections, while home is limited to 5. It's not a 10 connection limit; what SP2 does is limit you to 10 new connections per second. Windows Client. Sign in. United States English. Ask a question. Quick access. Search related threads. Remove From My Forums. Answered by:. Archived Forums. Windows 7 Networking.
Microsoft put it in place to prevent spammers, viruses, malware, and malicious applications from being able to use your computer as a hub to quickly replicate itself across networks. It also keeps your computer from being able to start a DDoS distributed denial of service attack which could single handedly destroy the Internet as we know it. In Windows XP Pro SP2, your computer is allowed 10 concurrent connections per second, while the Home edition is limited to just 5 connections.
In XP Pro if you try to load up more than 10 websites at the same time, for example, you will more than likely hit the limit which means some of your requests will get queued. Windows Vista Basic is even more restrictive with a limitation of just 2 concurrent connections per second, while Vista Ultimate peeks at 25 connections.
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