I noticed that Intel chipsets since P55 have a built in gigabit lan but motherboard makers prefer to integrate a 3rd party chip for the ethernet port. Whats the reason for that?
Yeah, I was under the impression that, even though the NIC was built into the chipset, the OEM still has to pay Intel for the license to use it. My Asus board has 1 Intel LAN port, but almost every other board I've seen uses Realtek.
Yeah, I was under the impression that, even though the NIC was built into the chipset, the OEM still has to pay Intel for the license to use it. My Asus board has 1 Intel LAN port, but almost every other board I've seen uses Realtek.
I don't see anything wrong about Realtek. Are you talking about some specific problems, or are you just hating without a reason?
Did that happen a while back? There used to be an issue with the green ethernet setting which caused disconnects since it tries to conserve power by giving just enough juice for the estimated cable length instead of the full 100m run and some cards back then just didn't do it well. Switching the green setting off solved the issue.Ironically enough, if you have good networking gear, there's usually no problems.
The only problems I personally have had with Realtek NICs, has been with very long cable installations (30-50m+) and (cheap) consumer type gear. Got an awful amount of random disconnects, with an added Intel NIC the problem went away just like that. I can't say if it was the specific implementation on those boards, the router or something else.
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Did that happen a while back? There used to be an issue with the green ethernet setting which caused disconnects since it tries to conserve power by giving just enough juice for the estimated cable length instead of the full 100m run and some cards back then just didn't do it well. Switching the green setting off solved the issue.
