Is your card a combo card?  Does it have a RJ45 port and a coax port?  If so, it is 
only 10-base-T.

We have a card here with a RTL-8029 chip on it.  It is only 10-base-T.

>>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] 7/23/2001 4:09:53 PM >>>
Is there any way to tell if you have a network card capable of 100
Mbps for a 100-base-T network?

I've got a Realtek RTL-8029 (NE2000 compat, PCI) card.  It won't
connect to the network as 100 base, but I was curious if there was
another way to find out.  

My ifconfig shows this:

eth0      Link encap:Ethernet  HWaddr 00:80:AD:38:6B:04  
          inet addr:192.168.1.3  Bcast:192.168.1.255  Mask:255.255.255.0
          UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST  MTU:1500  Metric:1
          RX packets:3047999 errors:0 dropped:0 overruns:0 frame:117
          TX packets:3051844 errors:346 dropped:0 overruns:0 carrier:692
          collisions:87761 txqueuelen:100 
          RX bytes:2360189199 (2250.8 Mb)  TX bytes:1064362386 (1015.0 Mb)
          Interrupt:11 Base address:0x1020 

I thought maybe it would say something there.  dmesg doesn't tell me
too much about it...

ne2k-pci.c: v1.02 for Linux 2.2, 10/19/2000, D. Becker/P. Gortmaker, 
http://www.scyld.com/network/ne2k-pci.html 
ne2k-pci.c: PCI NE2000 clone 'RealTek RTL-8029' at I/O 0x1020, IRQ 11.
eth0: RealTek RTL-8029 found at 0x1020, IRQ 11, 00:80:AD:38:6B:04.

Thanks,
Rob

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