Why some motherboards have dual ethernet anyway? I have a motherboard GigaByte EP45-UP45 and I see that its has dual ethernet so I curious put two cable plugged my motherboard and internet access loading and play games online seem same without dual.
Why some motherboards have dual ethernet anyway? I have a motherboard GigaByte EP45-UP45 and I see that its has dual ethernet so I curious put two cable plugged my motherboard and internet access loading and play games online seem same without dual.
plugging in ethernet cable in both ports does nothing for you. You're still connected to 1 of them. those dual ethernet port are for server purpose.
Thanks, I am not expert with server so I guess I will only use one port.
plugging in ethernet cable in both ports does nothing for you. You're still connected to 1 of them. those dual ethernet port are for server purpose.
Then why are SLI/Crossfire/CrossfireX motherboards like this one has 2 Ethernet ports? That's just overkill for servers if it's for gamers who want to get the most out of the graphics for games, even at a LAN party.
Okay, but I'm talking specifics of multiplayer gaming purposes that does not connect directly to the Internet. I know dual ethernet ports is for servers, but all the motherboard features for gaming are pretty much overkill for servers unless you have a server motherboard. Perhaps this thread should be left off to the gaming community if you're in it for gaming (3DGameMan.com, in particular).
extra ethernet port in mobo designed for gaming is just a few bucks more. it's cheaper to include them for all purposes. the mobo designed for gaming can also be used for video editing/rendering - like a mini-Pixar lab. More and more studios are using off-the-shelf products to create movies.
The reason for two ethernet ports is really simple.. You can connect to two different networks, purely something for server purpose.
You can keep the data flowing flowing from two different networks, securely without worrying if one can see the contents of another.
Say for one example it's an office that specializes in the practice of law.
You can put all the accounting/basic PC networks of the employees on one network.
You can then put all the case evidence/client information PC's on the other network.
The two will never be able to see the stuff transferred or being shared on both sides, pure privacy without having to worry. Then the boss's PC has two ethernet ports so he can connect to both networks.
Or you could dual ethernet for other cases like "backup" data flow, for smoother latency.. really important if the server does something that needs to be realtime for the clients.
Or you could isolate one network for LAN only to share printers, fileservers and the other for WAN.
The possibilities are endless, you can do whatever you want with it.. they just provide it for you.