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{{short description|Hardware component that connects a computer to a network}}
{{Redirect|Network card|the British Rail discount card|Network
{{
| name = Network interface controller
| image = Network card.jpg
| caption = A 1990s [[Ethernet]] network interface card that connects to the motherboard via the now-obsolete [[
| invent-date =
| invent-name =
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| via1_1 = integrated in [[chipset]] or [[System on a chip|SoC]]
| via1_2 = [[motherboard#Integrated peripherals|discrete onboard]]
| via1_3 = [[Peripheral Component Interconnect|PCI]] Connector
| via1_4 = [[Industry Standard Architecture|
| via1_5 = [[PCIe]] (including [[Mini PCIe]] and [[M.2]])
| via1_6 = [[FireWire]]
| via1_7 = [[USB]]
| via1_8 = [[Thunderbolt (interface)|Thunderbolt]]
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| via2_1 = [[Ethernet]]
| via2_2 = [[Wi-Fi]]
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| via2_5 = [[FDDI]]
| via2_6 = [[Token Ring]]
| via2_7 = [[
| class-name = Speeds
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|year = 2006
|work = Windowsnetworking.com
|publisher =
|access-date = 2012-06-09
}}</ref>
Early network interface controllers were commonly implemented on [[expansion card]]s that plugged into a [[computer bus]]. The low cost and
Modern network interface controllers offer advanced features such as [[interrupt]] and [[Direct memory access|DMA]] interfaces to the host processors, support for multiple receive and transmit queues, partitioning into multiple logical interfaces, and on-controller network traffic processing such as the [[TCP
== Purpose ==
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