Cat 2 cable was rated at 4 or 16 mbps whereas cat 3 cable would be rated at 10 mbps. Since 10baseT networks with Ethernet ran at 10 mbps this meant that cat 2 cable would not be useable in those networks. The minimum category cable for those networks had to be at least a cat 3 cable.
10% of 100 is 10. 100 * (10/100) = 10
percentage for 10 over 100 = 10% = 10/100 * 100% = 10 * 1% = 10%
10% is a tenth part of 100. Therefore 100 / 10 = 10
ten 1/10 x 100 = 100/10 = 10/1 = 10
Full duplex means it can receive and send at the same time.10 100 means it supports both of these speeds (10 Mbps and 100 Mbps).Full duplex means it can receive and send at the same time.10 100 means it supports both of these speeds (10 Mbps and 100 Mbps).Full duplex means it can receive and send at the same time.10 100 means it supports both of these speeds (10 Mbps and 100 Mbps).Full duplex means it can receive and send at the same time.10 100 means it supports both of these speeds (10 Mbps and 100 Mbps).
Usually it is written in somwhere near the Link LED or the connection jack or on the chipset. If it is connected in a machine the connect the machine with a cable to another computer or a 100mbps port of a N/W switch.
An Ethernet device that is capable of 10/100 operation is capable of transferring and receiving data at either 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps. Older devices were only capable of transferring at 10 Mbps. To be backwards-compatible, devices have to be capable of transmitting data at 10 Mbps.
10-Mbps Ethernet, 100-Mbps or Fast Ethernet, and 1000-Mbps or Gigabit Ethernet.
Ethernet LANs have transmission rates of 10 Mbps, 100 Mbps, 1 Gbps and 10 Gbps For an X Mbps Ethernet (where X = 10, 100, 1,000 or 10,000), a user can continuously transmit at the rate X Mbps if that user is the only person sending data. If there are more than one active user, then each user cannot continuously transmit at X Mbps.
By modifying the NIC properties through the operating system By modifying the NIC's EEPROM settings using its configuration utility todo depende de tu tarjeta
It's obviously 10 Mbps
This would depend on the operating system, but in Windows XP, you go to Control Panel, Network Connections, double click on the NIC (Network Interface Card) in question. Click the Configure button, then click the Advanced tab. Be careful when changing speeds of the NIC. Most switches are set to Auto. Sometimes when you change the NIC properties you will not be able to communicate. Sometimes powering off the device will fix that, sometimes not. Also, you need to match duplex settings as well. 10mbs should be set to half duplex, 100mbs should be set to full duplex. The switch should be set as well. I have seen it that the switch was set to auto and changing the device would not work until the switch was set. Older printers were usual culprits.
..What is the difference between 10 mbps and 54.0 mbps?.
It will slow down to any devices connected to the 10 Mbps hub. Other connections should not be affected.
100 Megabits per second
Standard speeds supported by 802.11x are 802.11a up to 54 Mbps, 802.11b up to 11 Mbps, 802.11g up to 54 Mbps and 802.11n up to 150 Mbps. These speeds are determined by the frequency band of the connection.