It can be any number of settings. By "Default" most network cards auto-negotiate speed. This is normally done by the card drivers by default, but the settings can be manually changed as well. You can force a 10/100 card to only talk at 100, or only at 10, etc.
For the sake of the discussion let's say you have have a 10/100mb Full Duplex switch and 5 computers connected to it. Computers #1-#4 have 10/100 cards, computer #5 has only a 10mb card.
Computer #1 talks to Computer #4, it's going to be at 100mb. That's because the switch has negotiated that both of it, and the cards are capable of talking at that speed. Same as if computer #2 talks to computer #3, or any number of combination of those 4.
Computer #1 talks to Computer #5, the switch will negotiate it at 10mb rate because that's all computer #5 can handle. It has negotiated with the switch that it is only capable of 10mbs.
I hope this helps clear things up a bit.
If all devices are 10 and 100 Mbps than the LAN would work at 100 Mbps.
- But if a device is working only at 10 Mbps, then the LAN would work at the slowest speed of 10 Mbps for that certain device.
100baseT LANs can support slower 10baseT devices but only on a switched network, not a hub, where the bandwidth is shared. On a hub the entire network will slow to near 10baseT data rates.
There is a proverb: the system is as strong as its weakest element. The slowest speed device.
If you are only talking about a LAN then it is the slowest network card on the Intranet which would be 10mbps.
1000000 mbs
The 802. 11g is a wireless standard that allows devices connect to a network. It supports bandwidth speeds of up to 54 Mbps.
802.11bAnswer Explanation: 802.1b operates at a speed of 11 Mbps. 802.11x networks are made up of one or more access points and one or more wireless network devices. The 802.11x group of wireless technologies each operate at a different transmission speed. The original 802.11 standard operated at speeds between 1 and 2 Mbps. 802.11a operates at a speed of approximately 54 Mbps. 802.11g operates at a speed of 54 Mbps.
It's obviously 10 Mbps
2.0 is the version number of the USB. You have several USB versions: 1.0 - Speed of 1.5 Mbps or 12 Mbps had problems and barely made it to the market 1.1 - Speed of 12 Mbps 2.0 - Speed of 480 Mbps 3.0 - Speed of 3.2Gbps (3200 Mbps), it is new and not yet available on the market
USB Version 1.1 allows for two speeds, 1.5 Mbps and 12 Mbps, and works well for slow I/O devices. USB Version 2.0 allows for up to 480 Mbps, which is 40 times faster than Original USB.
they say 3.1 Mbps link speed but in actual they are giving 0.5 to 1 Mbps link speed.
The speed of the coaxial cable is usually between 10 and 100 Mbps. The coaxial cable consists of a hollow outer cylindrical conductor that surrounds a single inner wire that is made of two conducting elements.
An Ethernet device that is capable of 10/100 operation is capable of transferring and receiving data at either 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps. Older devices were only capable of transferring at 10 Mbps. To be backwards-compatible, devices have to be capable of transmitting data at 10 Mbps.
As a general "good internet speed," most video game console manufacturers recommend at least 3 Mbps of download speed and 0.5 Mbps to 1 Mbps of upload speed. Source: Gospeedcheck
54 mbps
your computer's mbps speed is demand on your 1) IPS connection, your can your schema 2) notwork card.