Greetings!
On Wed, 21 May 2003 11:40:06 +1000 Glenn Hocking <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> Has anyone put any thought and testing whether it is better to have
> one network card with multiple IP assigned or 2-3 net cards with
> separate IP numbers.
> Actual specs, The cards are all 10/100 Intel's co
On Wed, 21 May 2003 11:40, Glenn Hocking wrote:
> Has anyone put any thought and testing whether it is better to have one
> network card with multiple IP assigned or 2-3 net cards with separate IP
> numbers.
>
> Actual specs, The cards are all 10/100 Intel's connected to the net via
> a 10mb/s ethe
At 10Mbps, having a few ethernet cards will speed up your transfers, but
it woud be easier to use 100Mbps instead. If your upstream is only
10Mbps, and you're pushing 10Mbps, having multiple ethernet cards won't
help too much.
If you were really wanting to use more than one card, I would sugges
Hi All
Has anyone put any thought and testing whether it is better to have one
network card with multiple IP assigned or 2-3 net cards with separate IP
numbers.
Actual specs, The cards are all 10/100 Intel's connected to the net via
a 10mb/s ethernet with direct public IPs. The secondary IPs ar
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