- Jul 3, 2005
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the Realtek Gigabit controllers as well as the new software stack now supports teaming functionality across all these ports which enables four discreet connections to act as a singe massive connection with four times the bandwidth
Originally posted by: Absolution75
anyone notice the obserd amount of either firmware or extra usb headers at the bottum of the board?
Originally posted by: Cogman
Why do people need 2 Ethernet ports? It just boggles my mind, unless you are like a server administrator or maybe you use your computer as the home firewall.
But what good does 4 ports do you? surely nobody has 4 networks simultaneously running in their house (thats just dumb)
Originally posted by: Blazer7
Originally posted by: Cogman
Why do people need 2 Ethernet ports? It just boggles my mind, unless you are like a server administrator or maybe you use your computer as the home firewall.
The answer here is Teaming. You can use 2 ports as 1 to effectively double your bandwidth.
Originally posted by: OptimisTech
Yes, but only if it's supported by the board drivers AND the router, a rarity in home routers unless I missed something. (Which I often do...) A more probable use would be for redundancy, but since most of these dual-NICs operate from a single chip, I think it's rare that you would lose one without losing both.
I have never understood the dual NIC thing since they started showing up a few years ago. Other then on servers, I just can't imagine a scenario in which a home user would see any real-world benefit from it. Now they're up to 4?!?!?! I would guess that 75-95% of people who use these plug into a 4-5 port of the shelf router. How many of those ports am I supposed to give up to one machine, and who on earth will I be exchanging data with at 4G?