Yes, as long as the network wiring is compatble. You must have cat-5e of cat-6 not just cat-5. You can tell this by looking at how many wires go into the connector. If there are 8 you are good to go. If there are only 4 you would need to rewire your network. Probably not unless your network speed is over 100mbs/sec than it will help
It is possible for a desktop computer to have a network card. The manuals that came with it should tell you. Look for terms like "Ethernet", "LAN adapter", etc. If your desktop is a Windows PC, look on the windows desktop for "My Network Places", the Control Panel or even the BIOS setup to see if there is a network card present in your desktop.
From what I can tell from the Discover Card website, Discover Card is not accepted at merchants in Sweden, as of 2014. However, you can use your Discover Card for cash advances on ATMs in the "pulse" network worldwide, including in Sweden.
Typically a debit card linked to Visa or MasterCard has the word Debit printed above the logo. This designation indicates that the card can either be used as a debit card or processed as a credit card under that particular network.
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Here are a few good themes for a valentines card.... . Be Mine, Valentine . Kiss And Tell . I Want U Back
"ping" will test for connectivity to a device at the Ethernet Address Level...but that does not mean the device's software is actually talking to the network or responding to the network. "ping" WILL tell you the device is wired up and has power applied to it's network interface board.
Connections to a network depend on the topology and cable type you are using. If we take the most common connection it is via UTP (unshielded twisted pair) cabling, utilizing an RJ-45 connector. This connector takes 8 wires in a modular connection on the cable.Plug one end of the cable into a network interface card on your PC, and the other end to a network connection, which may be a switch, router, hub, etc. The EIA/TIA structured cabling guidelines 568A/B will tell you much more about these types of connections.
You can tell if a card or pack of football cards are good or not by your friends.If they are all over it, then you know it's a good card.And if you don't have any friends, I feel sorry for you.GET SOME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! you touch them :)
Check in the back of the computer and make sure the network card lights are blinking. A steady light indicates connectivity and a blinking light indicates activity. If you don't see either light resolve the problem before you consider OS or application problems.
The "network interface card" in your computer could be in a number of locations, I would need more specifics (motherboard, year, manufacture) in order to exactly tell you. But you can look at the motherboard and find out yourself.Where you plug your network cable into (RJ 45) is soldered onto your mother board with fine copper lines running from the individual pins of the soldered component. The fine copper lines are called traces, so if you trace the trace you should be able to follow it back to the NIC if the NIC is integrated. If you have an expansion card for your NIC well then... it's on there.
If your laptop is equipped with a USB port (most are) then virtually any USB wireless adapter will work.