firewire

bebopin64

Active Member
im looking for a cheap motherboard that has firewire. it can be am2 or 775. cheap is the number one factor.
 
[-0MEGA-];1217345 said:
You could also get a cheap PCI firewire add-on card.

Excellent idea if you are just looking to get Firewire into a current build. :good:


if you have a laptop or dont have any spare PCI slots then this could work. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817111714
It may not be as fast as a PCI card but it will work when you cant use one.

This is just a hub. It does not give you the capability of those ports. I just extends from what is already available in the computer.
 
OK - I'm showing my greenness here -

But,

I thought a firewall was a computer application? How exactly do motherboards have firewalls - are they embedded into the hardware - OR - is there something more that I don't understand about firewalls?

How common are firewalls in MOBOs.

Trying to sponge any knowledge I can

Thanks
 
OK - I'm showing my greenness here -

But,

I thought a firewall was a computer application? How exactly do motherboards have firewalls - are they embedded into the hardware - OR - is there something more that I don't understand about firewalls?

How common are firewalls in MOBOs.

Trying to sponge any knowledge I can

Thanks

The confusion lies in the terms

you are thinking Firewall
we are discussing Firewire
Firewire is like USB, except different
A firewall protects your computer from network threats.


Firewire:
firewire.jpg


Firewall:
rc_DHCP_firewall.jpg
 
The confusion lies in the terms

you are thinking Firewall
we are discussing Firewire
Firewire is like USB, except different
A firewall protects your computer from network threats.

Thanks

The newness of all these computer jargon caused me to misread the OP.
 
i didnt consider the pci card because the person im building a computer for wanted a motherboard with firewire built in. i guess they need the pci slots idk, but now i can provide what they want.
 
[-0MEGA-];1218058 said:
Well Firewire was created in 1995, so it's not really anything new. :rolleyes:

True. :)

I'm not surprised that many people have not heard of it though. USB has much more market recognition and pervasiveness. Also, since it is know by several different names (Firewire, 1394a/b/c and soon to be d, iLink, and the rarer Lynx...), I am sure that has caused some confusion.
 
Yeah firewire is so much better than USB too, I would run FW over USB almost any day. We have some external FW2 (800mbps) drives hooked up to servers at work just for back ups and they are smoking fast.
 
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