I don't know if this helps, but you can read about etags here:
http://developer.yahoo.net/blog/archives/2007/07/high_performanc_11.html
and here is what Jeff Atwood thinks about ETags:
ETags are a checksum field served up
with each server file so the client
can tell if the server resource is
different from the cached version the
client holds locally. Yahoo recommends
turning ETags off because they cause
problems on server farms due to the
way they are generated with
machine-specific markers. So unless
you run a server farm, you should
ignore this guidance. It'll only make
your site perform worse because the
client will have a more difficult time
determining if its cache is stale or
fresh. It is possible for the client
to use the existing last-modified date
fields to determine whether the cache
is stale, but last-modified is a weak
validator, whereas Entity Tag (ETag)
is a strong validator. Why trade
strength for weakness?
also interview with Steve Souders at .NET Rocks may help:
Steve Souders: ... the default implementation of
IIS and Apache, they put both of
those servers, put something in the
e-tag that will make it very likely
that if the user ever has to check
the validity of that resource, the
browsers are going to be incorrectly
told that the resource is no longer
valid. So in Apache’s case, what they
put in the e-tag is the INO number of
the file on that web server so that
if you have more than one web servers
hosting your site which most large
websites do, that INO number is never
going to match across two servers so
if yesterday the user went to server
one and today they tried to validate
that resource and they go to server
2, the e-tag is not going to match,
e-tag overrides last modified date so
instead of just returning a 200-byte
304 response, the server has to
return a 50k response of the entire
image.