INTEL PRO/1000 GT just get this one it's cheap
But it's PCI and, as PhillyDee says, you want a PCI-E one.
A gigabit NIC at full tilt will virtually saturate the PCI bus.
PCI one will be fine, but if you have the space and the slots why not get a PCI-e one.
You would need to be doing some crazy things to saturate a PCI bus with a gigabit card.
PCI will allow for 133MB a sec as a theoretical max. A gigabit card, what 110MB a sec or so, and the PCI bus is shared, so any other devices will contend. If it gets to the point where that is limiting you, then you have other issues and should take a closer look at what you are doing.
266MB/s, this isnt 1994 ^^ a gigabit nic will work fine via PCI
The PCI specification also provides options for 3.3 V signaling, 64-bit bus width, and 66 MHz clocking, but these are not commonly encountered outside of PCI-X support on server motherboards.
Intel conducted a test in 1999 for the Gigabit ethernet. Their test result shows the full Gigabit bandwidth can only be achieved by implementing the 66MHz 64bit PCI bus, as well as use CPU and memory that fast enough not causing bottleneck effect. We have conducted the test in Compute Aid, Inc.'s lab for the Intel Gigabit ethernet card and switch (based on chips made by HP), they work flawlessly.
I thought a PCI bus was 32bit / 33Mhz which works out at 133MB
Not been following home networking for a while. Is cat5 fine for gigabit ethernet?