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New Well, I hadn't seen it before . . .
. . but I'll sure be watching for it in the future.

I don't think it was another zero-MAC that stopped us. We pulled all connections from one of the 16-port switches, power cycled it and plugged in only my notebook, the server in question, and the Internet router. Still wouldn't work, so I think that model Linksys simply refuses to handle zero-MACS.
New Some older Cisco, Linksys and...
off brand routers and switches don't handle a lot of odd but allowed things.

I ran into this on some managed D-Link gigabit switches. It was driving me nuts as the machine in question was the Business owners custom made machine.

I ended up having to disable the NIC on the motherboard and put in a new NIC. It would not take an assignment of a MAC address.

When I saw this thread... and read the first message, my first thought was all zero MAC addr. Its a bugger to troubleshoot. You almost have to sniff the connection, but anything you put in between the computer and the switch *fixes* or completely *masks* it, typically.
     Well, this is a new one to me. - (Andrew Grygus) - (5)
         Ooh, I know this one! - (drook)
         Well, that was interesting. - (Andrew Grygus) - (3)
             Known problem. - (folkert) - (2)
                 Well, I hadn't seen it before . . . - (Andrew Grygus) - (1)
                     Some older Cisco, Linksys and... - (folkert)

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