This auction is about si

This auction is about

3Com PCMCIA network card 3CXE589EC 

This means your notebook can access the Internet. This card is good for every notebook! The notebook should only have a PCMCIA interface! 

  

A PIV notebook has an integrated network card. This can be used to establish a network or DSL connection. You, as the owner of a 486/Pentium I, Pentium II and even Pentium III notebook, also want to access the Internet. The network cards that are produced today are not PCMCIA, but CardBus standard cards - they look the same as PCMCIA, but do not work with older notebooks. 

 

All (or almost all) cards that you can buy in a specialist store today are not PCMCIA, but Card-Bus (32-bit) cards and with a 486, Pentium I, Pentium-II, AMD-K6 and some Pentium III CANNOT WORK AT ALL. I know what I'm talking about: we also have such CardBus (32-bit) cards in stock, and they are only for PIII with approx. Good from 700 MHz and Pentium-4. 

           

    

    

Our card that we have at this auction will work with any notebook with PCMCIA: 

from 386, 486 and Pentium-1 to Pentium-IV, AMD K7, K8, CoreDuo. 

This means you can make your notebook DSL-capable or local network-capable. From the well-known manufacturer: 3Com Designation: 3CXE589EC, with RJ-45 connection.

Installation: the card is almost always recognized automatically; There are drivers for Ms-dos , Win 3.1x, Win95, Win98, WinNT Win2000, WinXP that can be downloaded from the Internet. 

It only takes a few minutes to be online.     

This is my IBM Centrino. I'm already on the Internet - it looks that simple:

    

       

          

  Scope of delivery: PCMCIA network card, as shown, in good used condition

 

             

 

        

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SET WITH
A PIV notebook has an integrated network card. This can be used to establish a network or DSL connection. You, as the owner of a 486/Pentium I, Pentium II and even Pentium III notebook, also want to access the Internet. The network cards that are produced today are not PCMCIA, but CardBus standard cards - they look the same as PCMCIA, but do not work with older notebooks.  All (or almost all) cards that you can buy in a specialist store today are not PCMCIA, but Card-Bus (32-bit) cards and with a 486, Pentium I, Pentium-II, AMD-K6 and some Pentium III CANNOT WORK AT ALL. I know what I'm talking about: we also have such CardBus (32-bit) cards in stock, and they are only for PIII with approx. Good from 700 MHz and Pentium-4.  Installation: the card is almost always recognized automatica