[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote on 01/24/2003 12:59:58 PM:

> I'm not to sure about the EISA interface. I know there is some speed
> improvement, but I'm too sure about the number of supported network 
cards.
> Or even finding EISA network cards at this point.  I think I might have 
one
> or two from a system pull a few years back.  I'll dig through my loot
> tonight and see if I can find anything.

EISA is a 32-bit bus with a maximum throughput of 33MB/s.  That's plenty 
for 100Mbit.

I have a pair of 3Com EISA 579's that are 100Mbit.  They worked fine in my 
IBM PC Server 320's for years, and they were capable of transferring 
100Mbit of data on Pentium 133's running OS/2.  Ah, the days...

> Thanks for the info.  Actually, it's a 486 w/ pci slots, but not enough 
to
> do the job - so I'm pretty certain it's EISA.  But I didn't think about 
that
> until I had already sent the e-mail...

There were a *lot* of 486 PCI motherboards and only a *very* few that were 
486 PCI and EISA.  Servers, yes.  Average motherboards, no.  You should be 
able to look at the slot and tell if it's EISA.  It'll be taller than an 
ISA slot (by about 1/4 an inch or so), and you should see the second row 
of copper fingers below the top one.  Odds are, it does *not* support 
EISA.

Tim Massey



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