There are different types of gibabit Ethernet; the cabling can either be some kind of copper cable, usually UTP, or fiber optic.
Cat-6
If you want greater speed, why not use gigabit ethernet? Just remember that all the devices and cabling must be capable of that speed or you won't actually see that speed.
data can be transferred at a maximum rate of 1000 Mbps data transmission can be via UTP or fiber optic cabling
You would want to move to a Gigabit network. This will require a switch capable of Gigabit speeds, network cabling capable of Gigabit speeds (Cat 5e for example), and a network interface on a computer that is also Gigabit rated. Most modern switches are Gigabit rated (even inexpensive soho switches).
10base5
Ethernet networking typically uses category 5 or category 6 cabling.
In order for you to achieve gigabit data rates, you need: * A gigabit Ethernet card (as you have) * A gigabit router * Cabling that is of correct length and quality to carry a gigabit signal. If these conditions are not met, the card will drop to the next available transfer rate.
B. 10Gbase-ER
Fast Ethernet runs at 100Mbit and requires CAT5e cables. Gigabit Ethernet is 1,000Mbit and requires CAT6 cables
Gigabit Ethernet almost always runs in full-duplex mode
You would need the ethernet card can handle gigabit network traffic cable.
Ethernet capacity varies depending on the standard used. The most common Ethernet standards include Fast Ethernet (100 Mbps), Gigabit Ethernet (1 Gbps), 10 Gigabit Ethernet (10 Gbps), and newer standards like 100 Gigabit Ethernet and beyond. Modern Ethernet technologies can support speeds up to 400 Gbps and even 800 Gbps in specialized applications. The capacity also depends on factors like cable type, network design, and distance.