[Date Prev][Date Next] [Thread Prev][Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

Re: good choice of network card?



On Mon, May 13, 2002 at 11:34:16PM +0100, Alex Hunsley wrote:
| I'm going to buy a new network card for my machine (running Debian potato
| 2.2r6).
| 
| Are there any net cards with a good reputation for stability and ease of
| install (i.e. not having to compile my own driver would be a plus)?

I have 2 Linksys LNE-100TX cards (PCI) in my machine.  One is Rev 2.0
(several years old) and the other is Rev 4.1 (little over a year old
now).  Both are 'tulip'.

I have 2 Netgear EA-201 (ISA) cards in a router box at my parents'
home.  They're both 'ne2k' cards, but require booting to MS-DOS (a
floppy is sufficient) and running their config program to disable PnP.
They work great other than that (and they don't auto-detect
full-duplex, but they're still faster than the dsl line they route
for).

I've also worked with 3 PCMCIA cards, 2 were 3c59x and one is a D-Link
card that uses the 8139too driver.  I wouldn't buy 3Com cards only
because they are overpriced (I didn't buy nor do I own the 3Com cards
I've tried).

I've also heard good things about the D-Link DFE-530TX+ (PCI).  It's
either a realtek 8139 or a tulip clone.

The Netgear FA-301 cards are supposed to be well-supported too
(ne2k-pci? tulip?  one of those common chipsets).

HTH,
-D

-- 

Windows, hmmm, does it come with a GUI interface that works or just
pretty blue screens?
 
GnuPG key : http://dman.ddts.net/~dman/public_key.gpg

Attachment: pgpLTJx8ijub_.pgp
Description: PGP signature


Reply to: