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Best Ethernet NIC with a Gigabyte?
All:
I have an older Gigabyte motherboard with an AMD 1100 CPU. What would be the best NIC to work with it? I am hoping to get DSL soon. Thank you. Keith |
#2
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Best Ethernet NIC with a Gigabyte?
In message Keith Lee
was claimed to have wrote: I have an older Gigabyte motherboard with an AMD 1100 CPU. What would be the best NIC to work with it? I am hoping to get DSL soon. Thank you. Personally, I'd grab nearly anything by Intel that is physically compatible with your motherboard. |
#3
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Best Ethernet NIC with a Gigabyte?
"Keith Lee" wrote in message news All: I have an older Gigabyte motherboard with an AMD 1100 CPU. What would be the best NIC to work with it? I am hoping to get DSL soon. Thank you. Keith Any nic... do you have pci slot available? get a gigabit nic, so for future expansion you will be set (t-10/100/1000). I use d-link my self. Pokeyman |
#4
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Best Ethernet NIC with a Gigabyte?
Keith Lee wrote:
All: I have an older Gigabyte motherboard with an AMD 1100 CPU. What would be the best NIC to work with it? I am hoping to get DSL soon. Thank you. Keith At one time, Ethernet devices were categorized according to their performance. A high performance device was one that could handle back-to-back packets with ease. For example, early in my career, I worked on a product which only had two buffers, and that would be considered a low performance product. (Of course, the product documentation doesn't say that :-) ) That was a long time ago (just after Ethernet was introduced), and most chips today are fully featured. A typical good design uses ring buffers and DMA, for both transmit and receive. Some even have various kinds of offloading features, but I haven't been keeping track of that stuff. This is an example of a chip you can get on a $10 NIC card. The document here claims, the receive side has a ring buffer, while the transmit side uses fixed buffers. And I think that causes a slight bit of grief for the software people. http://www.cs.usfca.edu/~cruse/cs326...mmersGuide.pdf So as long as you avoid certain of the $10 NIC cards, you'll be getting whatever performance your OS can manage. Occasionally, you'll run into an old chipset, that has some problems with its PCI bus, but for DSL download speeds, I wouldn't expect even the most broken PCI implementation to limit your fun. Some of these PCI bus problems become more evident, when you try to transfer files between two PCs. There is room on some OSes, for link tuning. For example, as a joke, I installed Win98SE on my current Core2 system. I did some download testing, and noted the usual crappy performance. I found a package that claims to modify some TCPIP settings in Win98, and after I used it, I was able to download at 500KB/sec (full link rate), just like in WinXP. So if your performance sucks, it isn't always the hardware that has a problem - it can also be the window size/delay product which is causing it. I'd give you a link to the package, but it's on a disk which is currently disconnected. Paul |
#5
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Best Ethernet NIC with a Gigabyte?
On Sun, 11 Jan 2009 14:46:40 -0500, pokey man wrote:
"Keith Lee" wrote in message news All: I have an older Gigabyte motherboard with an AMD 1100 CPU. What would be the best NIC to work with it? I am hoping to get DSL soon. Thank you. Keith Any nic... do you have pci slot available? get a gigabit nic, so for future expansion you will be set (t-10/100/1000). I use d-link my self. Pokeyman PM: Thanks! Keith Lee |
#6
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Best Ethernet NIC with a Gigabyte?
On Sun, 11 Jan 2009 16:40:31 -0500, Paul wrote:
Keith Lee wrote: All: I have an older Gigabyte motherboard with an AMD 1100 CPU. What would be the best NIC to work with it? I am hoping to get DSL soon. Thank you. Keith At one time, Ethernet devices were categorized according to their performance. A high performance device was one that could handle back-to-back packets with ease. For example, early in my career, I worked on a product which only had two buffers, and that would be considered a low performance product. (Of course, the product documentation doesn't say that :-) ) That was a long time ago (just after Ethernet was introduced), and most chips today are fully featured. A typical good design uses ring buffers and DMA, for both transmit and receive. Some even have various kinds of offloading features, but I haven't been keeping track of that stuff. This is an example of a chip you can get on a $10 NIC card. The document here claims, the receive side has a ring buffer, while the transmit side uses fixed buffers. And I think that causes a slight bit of grief for the software people. http://www.cs.usfca.edu/~cruse/cs326...mmersGuide.pdf So as long as you avoid certain of the $10 NIC cards, you'll be getting whatever performance your OS can manage. Occasionally, you'll run into an old chipset, that has some problems with its PCI bus, but for DSL download speeds, I wouldn't expect even the most broken PCI implementation to limit your fun. Some of these PCI bus problems become more evident, when you try to transfer files between two PCs. There is room on some OSes, for link tuning. For example, as a joke, I installed Win98SE on my current Core2 system. I did some download testing, and noted the usual crappy performance. I found a package that claims to modify some TCPIP settings in Win98, and after I used it, I was able to download at 500KB/sec (full link rate), just like in WinXP. So if your performance sucks, it isn't always the hardware that has a problem - it can also be the window size/delay product which is causing it. I'd give you a link to the package, but it's on a disk which is currently disconnected. Paul Paul: Thanks! Keith Lee |
#7
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Best Ethernet NIC with a Gigabyte?
"Keith Lee" schrieb im Newsbeitrag
news I have an older Gigabyte motherboard with an AMD 1100 CPU. What would be the best NIC to work with it? I am hoping to get DSL soon. Thank you. If it´s just for getting DSL work, you might throw in whatsoever, since very probably even the speed of an antique 10 MBit/sec NIC will exceed your DLS connection´s speed. So just to get started, you might pick a NIC from a computer-junkyard. The NIC very probably will not be the bottleneck in your "older" system. If you will need a faster NIC you will probably need a new system, also. New motherboards have a Gigabit NIC on board nowadays. So I would not spend much money on a faster extra card for your present system. Regards Franz47 |
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