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I have used both and have been very pleased, but just for the sake of ease I
would purchase the isa ones, I have noticed no difference in speed or
throughput. We are only talking about 50k, compared to either bus this
presents only a small amount of data transfer. With PCI modems it sets up a
pci serial port, the isa is a hard jumpered (only masicists should use the
isa plug and play setting) when set to com2 provides very straight forward
installation. Since you are running NT, I reccomend you check the speed of
the serial port that you are installing it on, I think it defaults to 9600,
and I have seen this degrade modem performance. Oem should work just fine,
if you dont need a box, the only worthwhile with it is the drivers good
luck.
[log in to unmask]
>I am having trouble deciding between the 3Com V.90 PCI and 3Com V.90 ISA
>modem. Both modems have voice capabilities, and are OEM. According to my
>research they are not winmodems (may be wrong) and the PCI version seems
>to be cheaper than the ISA version, at least in Toronto (Ontario,
>Canada).
>
>My current systems specifications are:
>SiS 80486 PCI (rev 2.0) Main Board 128KB Cache
>AMD 486 DX4 100
>80MB RAM 1.6GB Maxtor HD
>2MB PCI Matrox Millennium Video Card
>2X Matshita CR-562 CD-Rom connected to a
>SB16 Value Edition Non-PNP ISA Sound Card
>Logicode Quicktel 1414LH ISA RPI Modem
>Currently running Windows95 OSR2 with Netscape Communicator 4.5.
>Note: No problems installing hardware. Windows plug and play/pray works
>properly.
>
>Which one would be the best choice? or should I buy retail? Adds $50 to
>$75 Canadian to the price and only available in ISA.
>
>I am currently thinking about building a new system next year, probably
>with 5 or 6 PCI slots which means it would have only 1 or 2 ISA slots,
>with a Slot A or Slot One processor. Running Windows NT Workstation 4.0
>or Windows 2000.
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