If you have changed all the devices at once (switch and network cards) you are not able to know if the improvement has caused by the switch or by the NICs. Anyway, congrats for your new network :D El 30/01/12 04:01, Jason T. Slack-Moehrle escribió: > A few days ago, John Pierce made a comment about Intel network cards and that they are more reliable and a better overall card than most. (This is not exactly what he said, but rather I am paraphrasing) My small cluster of servers all had generic PCI nics in them (I was not using any onboard NICS). > > Today, I replaced the NICS with Intel Pro 1000 PCI-E NICS and replaces our small 5 port TP-Link GB switch with a nice 8 port Cisco GB switch and what a world of difference. The network is zippier for sure. Copying large files between machines using 'scp' is faster, our websites come up better (testing from my wife's work) too. > > I know some have joked about the PB conversation in terms of not realizing the amount of electricity and space it will take, but I really do read and pay attention and try not to ask totally stupid questions. > > John Pierce, thank you! > > -Jason > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos > > -- Lorenzo Martinez Rodriguez Visit me: http://www.lorenzomartinez.es Mail me to: lorenzo at lorenzomartinez.es My blog: http://www.securitybydefault.com My twitter: @lawwait PGP Fingerprint: 97CC 2584 7A04 B2BA 00F1 76C9 0D76 83A2 9BBC BDE2