ping [IP Address] -s 1024 -c 768 (The -s sets the size; -c sets the count) A Note on "Ping of Death"
Are you looking to issue, or are you curious about the history of display resolutions ?
On most modern systems (Windows, macOS, Linux), you can simulate this by specifying the data size in the terminal:
ping [IP Address] -l 1024 -n 768 (The -l sets the size to 1024 bytes; -n sends it 768 times)
: Identifying the Maximum Transmission Unit of a network path. If a 1024-byte packet fails but a smaller one passes, there may be a configuration issue on a router.
: This often refers to the number of times the ping command is executed or a specific timeout/buffer setting in older custom ping utilities. The Purpose of a Large Ping Sending a 1024-byte ping is generally used for:
ping [IP Address] -s 1024 -c 768 (The -s sets the size; -c sets the count) A Note on "Ping of Death"
Are you looking to issue, or are you curious about the history of display resolutions ?
On most modern systems (Windows, macOS, Linux), you can simulate this by specifying the data size in the terminal:
ping [IP Address] -l 1024 -n 768 (The -l sets the size to 1024 bytes; -n sends it 768 times)
: Identifying the Maximum Transmission Unit of a network path. If a 1024-byte packet fails but a smaller one passes, there may be a configuration issue on a router.
: This often refers to the number of times the ping command is executed or a specific timeout/buffer setting in older custom ping utilities. The Purpose of a Large Ping Sending a 1024-byte ping is generally used for:
"/>