You could always try the 3rd party driver if you're curious, but
I doubt the speed will change.
It should, but it should be minor.
Unless there is a bug or issue with one of the drivers, for the
purposes of practical conversation, the speed will not change
Actually it will, as one is a userlevel application injecting into
the network stack where the other lives there rightly. This has a
performance affect.
. Yes, the routines in the driver that handle moving bits around
differently may mean that one is ever-so-unnoticably technically
"faster" than the other, but for practical purposes, any difference,
as you said, will be extremely minor, such that it's likely not even
noticeable.
Try using bmon.
--
-dhan
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dan Shoop AIM: iWiring
Systems & Networks Architect http://www.ustsvs.com/
email@hidden http://www.iwiring.net/
1-714-363-1174
"The wise man doesn't give the right answers, he poses the right
questions." -- Claude Levi-Strauss
iWiring provides systems and networks support for Mac OS X, unix, and
Open Source application technologies at affordable rates.
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