The network card also is known as a network adapter; it can be installed in the system after the system has been purchased, or the system comes with a network card built in. A system that comes with a network card built in is said to have an integrated network card—meaning the card is integrated into the system. Figure 3-1
shows an integrated network card port on the side of a laptop; desktop computers typically have the port on the back of the computer.
Network cards that are installed on the computer as an add-on can be installed into the system by inserting the card into the expansion bus of the system (usually PCI, but in the past it was ISA) or by plugging
in a USB device. There are a number of different types of expansion slots in the system. When installing a network card, you will need to make sure that you get the correct type of card for the particular type of expansion slot. For example, a PCI card is placed in a PCI slot and will not fit into an ISA or AGP slot. The
following is a list of popular expansion bus architectures, and Figure 3-2 shows a picture of an ISA network interface card.
- ISA Industry Standard Architecture (ISA) is an old bus architecture that runs at 8 MHz and supports 8- or 16-bit cards.
-MCA Microchannel Architecture (MCA) was built by IBM and has a 32-bit architecture that runs at 10 MHz.
-VESA Video Electronics Standards Association (VESA, also known as VESA local bus, or VLB) at the time ran at the system speed (which was around 33 MHz); it has a 32-bit architecture.
-EISA Extended Industry Standard Architecture (EISA) is the upgrade to ISA that supports 32-bit cards running at 8 MHz.
-PCI Peripheral Component Interconnect (PCI) is the popular bus architecture today for adding cards to the system. PCI runs at 33 MHz and has a 32-bit or 64-bit bus architecture. Most network cards today are PCI.
-AGP Advanced Graphics Port (AGP) is the new graphics standard that runs at 66 MHz and is used by video cards.
-PCMCIA Personal Computer Memory Card Industry Association (PCMCIA) is the bus architecture used in laptop computers. PCMCIA has a 16-bit architecture that runs at 33 MHz.
0 comments:
Post a Comment