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Reddit mentions of Dell Intel PRO/1000 VT Quad Port Server Adapter LP PCI-E with Both BR

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 5

We found 5 Reddit mentions of Dell Intel PRO/1000 VT Quad Port Server Adapter LP PCI-E with Both BR. Here are the top ones.

Dell Intel PRO/1000 VT Quad Port Server Adapter LP PCI-E with Both BR
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    Features:
  • EXPI9404VT
  • DELL
Specs:
Height1.3 Inches
Length9.8 Inches
Weight0.45 Kilograms
Width6.2 Inches

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Found 5 comments on Dell Intel PRO/1000 VT Quad Port Server Adapter LP PCI-E with Both BR:

u/submersedSubmarine · 5 pointsr/PFSENSE

I'd recommend something similar to the Dell Optiplex 3010 Small Form Factor (SFF). While it's not as small as the 3040M it does allow PCIe expansion. $280 seems like a lot. On eBay, I found the 3010 SFF for less than $100. My network is setup for Gigabit but I don't get Gigabit speeds from my ISP unfortunately.

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  • Dell Optiplex 3010 SFF or equivalent SFF
    • Very small while still upgradable
  • Intel 2nd Gen or newer
    • I have an i5 3470 and I haven't seen it go past ~10% utilization
    • Even an i3 should be perfectly fine
  • For a NIC, anything Intel that's rated Gigabit
u/hotas_galaxy · 2 pointsr/PFSENSE

Intel PRO/1000 VT quad port, $53. Ordered mine a couple months ago, and it had both LP and FP adapters in the box.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B002JLKNIW

u/UnexpectedRimjob · 1 pointr/PFSENSE

Ended up buying this guy? https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B002JLKNIW/ I figured even if its wrong or not great I'm just experimenting for now on. Thanks for the help!

u/seriouslydh · 1 pointr/homelab

Recently grabbed this quad for $67 and prime, looks like it's cheaper now!

Intel PRO/1000 VT Quad Port Server Adapter LP PCI-E EXPI9404VT https://www.amazon.com/dp/B002JLKNIW/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_DuhaAbR4EDD6T

u/jumpingtens · 1 pointr/tmobile

Install pfSense. It’s free, open-source, regularly updated, and private, because you skip the middle-man servers by establishing your own endpoint at home. It does the job, even when running off an old computer/laptop and will be better than any $300 SoHo router you buy, which likely only allows certain types of VPN passthrough (no VPN generation, and passthrough is often limited to cracked protocols like PPTP), i.e. you need to pay for 3rd party VPN service or live with their ads and hope they don’t look at your traffic. pfSense allows you to generate the VPN connection. pfSense is a total router replacement and does everything: QoS, encryption, can take many ISP connections as input, load balancing, multiple VPN types (including the safer OpenVPN), customizable firewall rules, add-on packages that sniff malicious traffic, allows you to hand out guest vouchers that expire, etc. If installing on a laptop that has only one wired NIC, you can split that with any spare old router or switch. If that router or switch has no Wi-Fi, you can use the laptop’s built-in wireless NIC as a wireless AP. If installing on a desktop with no Wi-Fi capable accessories, wireless NICs are cheap. If installing on a desktop with only one wired NIC and no router or switch, PCI-E quad-port NICs are cheap. Because your hardware likely exceeds the recommended system requirements, you likely can handle millions of simultaneous connections and never be forced to reboot your rig.