DaveDDS wrote on 2025-10-14, 15:16:
Jo22 wrote on 2025-10-12, 19:33:
... But from my perspective, 10/100 MBit wasn't that much even in the 90s ..
I think if really depends on "perspective" - Some of us "grew up" in computing having to transfer stuff between systems via floppy, or (after our setups became more capable) RS-232 cables. [..]
Hi, I did that, too! 🙂 I loved building the simple "3-wire" cables and run them around the house.
There were small DOS TSRs that made one PC's HDD appear as a drive letter on the other PC, I remember.
At one point, I vaguely remember, I had a little mailbox running and a second computer with RS-232 served as a network drive.
On other hand, I was a fan of shareware CD-ROMs too by the mid-90s..
Perhaps that's why I had a different perspective on things.
I mean, if you have a shelf full of 650 MB discs each..
Then, there was this Channel Videodat thing from 1990 onwards that was being adverised on computer shows on TV.
It allowed receiving shareware via TV channel, basically. Using a similar technology that Teletext did.
Slow by today's standard, but faster than a phone line connection with an ordinary 14k4 data/fax modem.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RgCqSX-cOvk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DiKAG-HSCIw
Another high-speed thing that comes to mind is FireWire (as a technology).
It appeared in late 90s and allowed up to 400 MBit/s connection, faster than NICs.
It could be even used as a TCP/IP network connection between two PCs, like a cross-over cable between two NICs.
Windows XP supported this kind of connection out-of-box, I remember.
Later on, FireWire could do up to 800 MBit/s, too, but popularity already had declined due to USB 2.0 (480 Mbit/s) and Gibabit NICs.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IEEE_1394#General_networking
Last but not least, where I live, there originally was a plan to start to build a fibre network for telecommunications by the 1970s already.
Unfortunately, the money intended for the project was spent on build cable TV network.
A summary can be read here.
Some of my fellow citizens are still sad about how things went.
Mainly because dumb television won over intelligent telecommunications, I assume.
If history had been different here, we would have had ended up with ISDN much sooner or would have gotten a better technology by then, even.
Not that ISDN was bad - 64 KBit/s per channel was fine by 1980s standards.
Japan also did experiment with ISDN since the early 1980s, after all.
But it wasn't until the ~ mid-1995 that it was available in many cities in my country.
Before, it was merely being available experimentally or in selected regions/cities.
And it wasn't until 1999/2000 when we finally got DSL over here.
Followed by cable TV internet soon after, I think.
The average users were still thinking that ISDN was cutting-edge at the time.
In parts because internet wasn't "on radar" yet when ISDN started to be deployed.
(I mean, to be fair, 128 KBit/s by combining two 64 KB ISDN lines was quite common
and appearing to be fast enough, considering the basic HTML pages of the time.)
So by mid-90s, over here, most people were already proud to have analogue telephones that can do modern DTMF dialing (tone dialing).
Which was very useful for then-new voice computers on phone that required to enter a number.
("Please press 1 if you have questions for ABC,
or press 2 if you have questions for DEF or press 3 if you have other questions.. Press 0 to get back to main menu.."
Without it, on a pulse-dialing operated phone, a small DTMF generator meant for an answering machine had to be held next the handset.
Edit: The device did look like this
By early-mid 90s, pulse dialing still was considered being "normal" or the standard where I live.
Telephones could do both (via switch), but most PBX systems weren't ready for it, for example.
The use of pulse-dialing especially was apparent when looking at old magazines or those Minitel/BTX type of terminal programs, I think.
They always had ADTP string..
Anyway, I merely try to explain why I think that some things were a bit frustrating.
Quite a few things were unecessarily being delayed or not being invested in.
At least were I live. Not that I don’t like robust/simple technology, but digital technology was a bit necleted, I think.
Both should have been available simultanously without competing.
The importance of things like fibre or broadband telecommunications was at least kind of foreseable by the mid-80s already.
When thing such as the Amiga or Macintosh started to become well known by the average person, even.
Edit: I forget to mention, there had been physical wire connections (broadband) that could be rented from our national teleco.
They were basically being electrically connected, like a landline connection,if I understand correctly.
We also had equivalent to a T1 line, I think. But that wasn't available to/affordably by ordinary citizens.
Universities, schools, businesses.. They likely had such things in the 90s already.
Edit: Speaking of emulated NICs, this article is an interesting read.
https://www.os2museum.com/wp/emulating-etherlink/
The 3C501 is known for the comments made about it by Donald Becker, the author of many Linux networking drivers in the mid-1990s: “Don’t purchase this card, even as a joke.” The comments were not unjustified when they were made; the 3C501 was already an obsolete design in 1992 or so. The problem was that the card has a tiny buffer, only big enough for one packet, and three mutually exclusive modes: Send, receive, and buffer access by the host (obviously no full-duplex Ethernet there). Once a packet is received, further reception stops until the packet buffer is emptied by the host and receive re-started again. That leads to many dropped packets and very poor performance in busy networks, particularly networks with a lot of broadcast or multicast traffic.
Fortunately, the virtual switch in a hypervisor has the ability to buffer packets, and packet loss is far less of a problem in a VM. Which is not to say the emulated EtherLink is some kind of a great performer, but it can certainly handle much more than 10Mbps.
So I suppose that modern emulators can do improve network performance, too? 🙂
If even an ancient design of ~1985/1986 can be made do more than 10 MBit/s, I mean.
The chip design dates back to 1982, my bad.
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