There are several ways of checking this out, and we're assuming that the computer does in fact have a network interface card (i.e. a network adapter) in it. Once again, the trusty Device Manager is a good way to go. Assuming this is a Windows computer, for example Windows 7, go to your start menu and look where it says "computer." Right click on this, and click "Manage."
A list comes up and on that list it should say "network adapters." Click this and whatever kind of network card you have will appear. Right click on it and it should have an option that says "enable." This should work fine.
NIC
To connect with other computers. A NIC is a network card.
A Network Interface Card (NIC) is needed to connect a computer to a network. It allows a computer to communicate with other devices on the network by sending and receiving data packets. Without a NIC, a computer cannot access network resources or connect to the internet.
Network Interface Card(NIC)
NIC
Having more than one NIC on a computer can cause Internet connectivity problems if the correct configurations are not performed. For example, one should not allocate both NIC's to the same subnet.
USB ports enable you to attach USB-compliant devices The NIC enables you to attach the computer to a LAN or a WLAN The parallel port enables you to connect devices such as printers and external drives
NIC stands for Network Interface Card. It is connected to the motherboard of the computer. It provides the device with a MAC address and allows a device to access a computer network such as the internet.
where can i find my nic driver my emachine desktop computer where i can reinstall please someone help me i have try everything cant find it i hope someone can help me
NICs stands for network interface controller. In computer networking, a NIC provides the hardware interface between a computer and a network. A NIC technically is network adapter hardware in the form factor of an add-in card such as a PCI or PCMCIA card.
network interface card
Since you didn't state what operating system you are using, I will offer Windows XP/Vista answers. No. Not with standard software. You can, however, define more than one static IP address (and subnet) for a single NIC. The addresses can be on the same or different network segments depending on what you need. This is most commonly done to allow different services on a single computer to use different IP addresses so they can be easily moved to separate computers when necessary.