Russell Coker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > >> The issue of Cardbus being required for 100baseT is definately worth > >> noting. > > > >It's also not true. I have a 100baseT PCMCIA card. I haven't tried > >measuring the actual throughput, but it's definately much faster on a > >100baseT network than a 10baseT network. (And it's capable of talking > >on a 100baseT network, which a 10-only card is not.) > > 1a) Most 100baseT networks will auto-negotiate to 10baseT if needed.
Only if you have a 10/100 switch that works fine. On a 10/100 Hub all ports will drop to 10 MBit/s and the network will be slow. Also all Windows PCs will probably have to be rebooted or even manually switched to 10 MBit/s in the configuration. If you have a cheap 100 MBit Hub it might not switch to 10 MBit and then it doesn´t work at all with a 10 MBit/s card. > 1b) Those which don't will have spare 10baseT ports anyway. ??? Where from? A switch? Mixed 10/100 MBit networks are expensive. Its much cheaper to buy a second network card and setup one linuxbox as gateway, if linux is present, than to have a switch. And if you have only 100 MBit cards you won´t have 10 MBit switch or gateway ready. > 2) If 100baseT on PC-Card is only capable of 20Mb/s as has been suggested > then it is still capable of being faster than 10baseT while (IMHO) not being > fast enough to justify extra expense or effort. Also there is the issue of > the amount of CPU time required for transfers. I expect that CardBus will > require less CPU time which is something that interests me! I have one 100 MBit card in my Alpha and a 10 MBit card in my old PC. Also at work they have a 100/10 MBit network via Linux gateway and hubs. If I had a 10 MBit card for my Laptop I couldn´t just plug it in at work, but would have to get a cable connected to the right hub, i.e. I would have to grab the cable and follow it till I reach the hub and then maybe plug it into the other one. 10 MBit/s cards can be realy anoying. The only problem with 100 MBit cards is that they don´t have a BNC connector, but who is using BNC only nowadays? I have a "Fiber Line 16 Bit 10/100 Fast Ethernet" card in my laptop and it works great. Only problem is the throughput. On a 100 MBit/s switched network I get 11 MBit/s and a lot of CPU useage. Anything I could configure differently to make it faster or is that the limit of pcmcia? May the Source be with you. Goswin