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Dedicated network card? Is there any benefit?

Joined
Aug 14, 2012
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System Name "Big E"
Processor I5 2400
Motherboard Intel DQ67OW
Cooling Scythe Samurai ZZ
Memory 4 X 2 Gb Kingmax 1333
Video Card(s) MSI RX470 gaming x 4gb
Storage samsung F3 500 GB
Display(s) Acer S271HLBbid
Case "Big E"
Power Supply Gembird 450 W
Mouse Generic
Keyboard Generic
Software W10 LTSC
Benchmark Scores Nothing worthy to mention
Hello,
My computers motherboard comes with a built in Qualcomm Atheros AR8151 PCI-E Gigabit Ethernet Controller .Would there be any point in installing a dedicated network card? I mostly browse , watch videos and play JC2 MP.
 
Your onboard ethernet is great, only like Intel onboard is better, so no need a dedicated one, other then if u have weird problems with it that new net cable or driver cannot fix.
 
Many moons ago, it used to matter. Nowadays, nope. Unless you require two ports and need some advanced features of server class, onboard is perfectly fine.
 
Only if you have issues with the onboard. Ive had a few that on reboot would not connect but honestly I think it was the router

Remember when the Killer Nic was like $300

capture001.jpg
 
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That's like the beats of NICs. Ha ha!^

Also Intel NICs FTW but I would only shell out bookubucks if you need em for HA-VMs or enterprise stuff. They can be very expoonsive.

BTW if you do need more NICs you could use server 2012 and team em like I do , buuuut that might be a bit much for yah to deal with if you don't got it allready ;)
 
Thanks for all your answers,i have no problems with it and i don't do enterprise stuff with it. I`ll stay with the onboard card :)
 
I remember the Killer NIC. Back when it came out, even with onboard offerings then, the general consensus was that the only good thing about it was that it provided a front-end for some traffic shaping rules, on the computer it was installed in, which would be better handled by your router anyway. Good for people who hook up directly to the modem and don't know how to throttle torrents to save bandwidth for other things... which is probably nobody.
 
Good for people who hook up directly to the modem and don't know how to throttle torrents to save bandwidth for other things...

Horrible idea... home grade router firewalls are bad enough, but Windows firewall acting as a WAN firewall between you and the Internet is downright insane beyond very temporary testing and diagnostics purposes. Even if you know what you're doing with your PC and hook it up this way, home-grade operating systems are easy enough to break into that it wouldn't be worth the effort.

Localized traffic shaping has its place, and is kind of a nice feature to manage at your PC if you're a power user, I'd still do so behind a router/firewall. While the router might do QoS/traffic shaping for the LAN, the Killer NIC software doing it locally could provide a power user with some nice features that lose their shine after a few days...but could be of little use for many. Especially if they have a crappy router or haven't firmware modded it yet, even then...meh.

@OP, ya sticking with what you have is the best option...no need to move on unless it has issues, causes issues or failed. :toast:
 
best to get an actual stateful firewall like a meraki or cisco asa or ubiquiti or roll your own pfsense/untangle/ipcop box.
 
I only use add on cards if I am building a router, my on board is dead, or I want two interfaces into different networks.
 
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