Glossary:NIC: Difference between revisions

(Created page with "A NIC or Network Interface Controller is the part of a computer or router that connects it to a network. Formerly it was often a separate add-on card but nowadays it's nearly always buit-in to the computer unless an extra one is needed. A computer connected to more than one network or a router has a NIC for each network, and each must have its own IPAddress.")
 
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A NIC or Network Interface Controller is the part of a computer or router that connects it to a network. Formerly it was often a separate add-on card but nowadays it's nearly always buit-in to the computer unless an extra one is needed. A computer connected to more than one network or a router has a NIC for each network, and each must have its own IPAddress.
A NIC or Network Interface Controller is the part of a computer or [[Glossary:Router|router]] that connects it to a network. Formerly it was often a separate add-on card but nowadays it's nearly always built-in to the computer unless an extra one is needed. A computer connected to more than one network or a router has a NIC for each network, and each must have its own [[Glossary:IPAddress|IPAddress]].

Latest revision as of 22:23, 22 February 2024

A NIC or Network Interface Controller is the part of a computer or router that connects it to a network. Formerly it was often a separate add-on card but nowadays it's nearly always built-in to the computer unless an extra one is needed. A computer connected to more than one network or a router has a NIC for each network, and each must have its own IPAddress.