I think "compatible" is a weird things with
Novell Ethernet labeled /
citified cards as it's my understanding that Novell didn't actually sell
the vast majority of NE-1000 / NE-2000 cards.? Instead, they licensed /
certified that other manufacturer cards adhered to their standard.? Thus
there were a LOT of non-Novell NE-1000 / NE-2000 cards.? And that it's
mostly by design.
Correct. Novell got out of the hardware market after the NP600 Ethernet
cards and those impressive ISA disk controller cards. Both were pretty
impressive, if I recall the NP600 had the entire IPX/SPX protocol on it
to offload work from the CPU and the disk card could do mirroring right
on the controller. But newer CPUs just pointed to the whole "the CPU is
quicker anyway" so Novell got out of that business and licensed boards
like the NE2000 for a pittance.
That, the Intel Etherexpress, and the 3c509 pretty much did it for
Ethernet till PCI.
I'm curious to know what network stack you're
going to run on that
system.? I don't know if it's an 8088, 80286, 80386 or what.? Each
obviously has different capabilities.? Though I guess the 8-bit ISA
slots indicate that it's probably 8088 or 80286.? Though I think that
Compaq may have used the 8086 too.? Whatever it is, chances are good
that memory will be small if not tight.
Pretty much all 80206's had 16 bit busses, the only ones I saw with 8
bit were XT's upgraded with the Mountain/286 or that oddball Microsoft
card. The Mountain was the weirdest, 8 bit card, 80286 with a couple of
K of cache memory, and a plug to go into the 8086 CPU socket. That was
it, no memory, no disk, no kidding.
CZ
Novel ECNE (I so don't get to drag that out much anymore. Drat)