• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

a simple question...

ross8425

Member
i am in the process of making a linux machine / firewall and since i would run the cable modem directly into the machine, is there any problem with using an old 10mb ethernet card? i have a 3 meg down, and since i would have to buy 1 more card, its obviously going to be a 10/100, so would having that 10 meg card in there affect my network performance via computer to computer
 
Since you only have 3mbit down, a 10mbit card on the outside wouldn't affect much. Watch out for ISA cards though, they can often be a PITA, sometimes it's better to spend the $5-10 on an ok PCI 10/100 card.
 
yeah the card i got is a pci. its in my desktop right now (i had another computer hooked to it testing something) but its not my main one. thanks for the answer 🙂
 
I don't know if I've ever seen a PCI 10mbit card. 😛

I used a 10mbit ISA 3com card in my OpenBSD firewall when I was running one. Worked just fine. Prefered Intel of Linksys though.

GL with it all.
 
Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
I don't know if I've ever seen a PCI 10mbit card. 😛

I used a 10mbit ISA 3com card in my OpenBSD firewall when I was running one. Worked just fine. Prefered Intel of Linksys though.

GL with it all.

They are actually common in prefab machines like dells early models.

A 10mbit card with a 3mb pipe through it may have some hiccups. Think about an 11mb connection on 802.11b. If you setup a proxy over that (one wireless LAN to another WLAN) you will experience major slowdowns. You need to justify your application of a NIC to the amount of clients on the network.
 
Back
Top