The PC is set to full duplex. The switch port fails to autonegotiate the duplex setting and defaults to half duplex, which causes a duplex mismatch.
yes, it can.
There are a couple of ways to stop a ping of death. If you have an anti-virus and firewall installed on your PC this will prevent this from happening. Also because a ping of death can cause your PC to freeze up you can reboot to fix this issue.
On Windows you go to Start > Run > Type "cmd" without the quotes ENTER type "ping ", followed by the IP address of the server you want to ping. ex. "ping www.google.be" ENTER The response time is your ping. (basically it's a measurement of time needed to send a signal between your PC & another PC or device.)
USE THE PING 127.0.0.1 COMMAND AT HTE COMMAND PROMT
You can't play Nintendo Switch games on a PC, you need a Nintendo Switch.That does not include games which started out on PC and were ported to Switch.
in command prompt ping -L 600 "internet address"
Running the ping command with -n "count" is the number of echo request to send.
Is the Windows Firewall enabled, or any other Firewall installed and not configured?
If you can PING the router but cannot PING to the outside world, this indicates that the router is not successfully connecting to the Internet.
To ping a computer, you must be sure that the PCs are on the same network. Boot the PC you wish to ping. In the bottom right corner of your monitor is the system tray and the network status is shown. Double click and the network connection(s) of your PC appear with either a red X, meaning there is no connection, or an arrow is between them which means there is a connection. Right click on the network you are using and select properties and record the IP address. Leave this PC running and then boot the other PC and run the command prompt. Again, check that the network connection is still working and type "ping" and the IP address.
Connect a wire from each PC to an unused port on the switch.