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swhitney2003
Premium
join:2003-06-13
NH

gigabit

If we ever reach these 100mbps speeds we're going to have to make the new home networking standard gigabit. I know it exists, but the majority is 100mbps. Prepare to upgrade your networking hardware =P

Done_Posting
Shoot to kill
Premium
join:2003-08-22
Toledo, OH

said by swhitney2003:

If we ever reach these 100mbps speeds we're going to have to make the new home networking standard gigabit. I know it exists, but the majority is 100mbps. Prepare to upgrade your networking hardware =P
Agreed. Any service offering over 50 Mbps would be wasted by using anything less than Gig-E gear in the PC and home network.

- Tate

--
Happiness is an OC-48 in your basement...

BosstonesOwn

join:2002-12-15
Everett, MA

HAHA !! Done already ! Gotta love Cisco refurbs


Done_Posting
Shoot to kill
Premium
join:2003-08-22
Toledo, OH

said by BosstonesOwn:

HAHA !! Done already ! Gotta love Cisco refurbs
Same here... but do you have 10Gig-E yet?

- Tate

--
Happiness is an OC-48 in your basement...


serge666

join:2004-06-07
Little Falls, NJ

reply to swhitney2003

said by swhitney2003:

If we ever reach these 100mbps speeds we're going to have to make the new home networking standard gigabit. I know it exists, but the majority is 100mbps. Prepare to upgrade your networking hardware =P
all new motherboards come with Gig-E so that's a start


Cjaiceman
Premium,MVM
join:2004-10-12
Parker, CO
kudos:2
Reviews:
·Comcast Business..

reply to Done_Posting

said by Done_Posting:

said by BosstonesOwn:

HAHA !! Done already ! Gotta love Cisco refurbs
Same here... but do you have 10Gig-E yet?

- Tate

No, but there is no reason to. Computer hard drives can't move data that fast, so there is no point unless you are a service host, in which case it shouldn't be in your basement, it should be in a professional hosting center.


Cjaiceman
Premium,MVM
join:2004-10-12
Parker, CO
kudos:2
Reviews:
·Comcast Business..

reply to serge666

said by serge666:

said by swhitney2003:

If we ever reach these 100mbps speeds we're going to have to make the new home networking standard gigabit. I know it exists, but the majority is 100mbps. Prepare to upgrade your networking hardware =P
all new motherboards come with Gig-E so that's a start
Not all, only mid to high level retail computers do, and forget about the laptops. Home built or aftermarket computers, yes, but go buy a low end e-machines or HP and they will still only have 100Mb.

Done_Posting
Shoot to kill
Premium
join:2003-08-22
Toledo, OH

reply to Cjaiceman

said by Cjaiceman:

No, but there is no reason to. Computer hard drives can't move data that fast, so there is no point unless you are a service host, in which case it shouldn't be in your basement, it should be in a professional hosting center.
True, but what if I want to turn my basement into a co-lo center? There's plenty of room down there and God knows it's cold enough...

Getting back to reality, sure there's no need for 10Gig-E yet, and there probably won't be for quite a while. I can dream though, can't I?

- Tate

--
Happiness is an OC-48 in your basement...

Ahrenl

join:2004-10-26
North Andover, MA

reply to Cjaiceman
Yes, but the people who buy those things, will also still have $15 DSL.



PGHammer

join:2003-06-09
Accokeek, MD
Reviews:
·Comcast

reply to Done_Posting
Excuse me? PCs have been capable of Gig-E since at least 2003 (desktops, not workstations); the holdup at the home network end has been the router. However, most draft-N routers include gigabit switches. Further, you are apparently making an assumption that 100 Mbps (FastEthernet) network cards in home PCs are half-duplex. For shame; FastEthernet standardized on full-duplex in 1998 (the only reason half-duplex is there at all is for backward-compatibility with existing h-d-only networks).

The motherboard in my current PC (which I built) is the ASUS P4C800-E Deluxe, and features onboard Intel-based gigabit Ethernet, yet it dates back to 2003, and it's not even ASUS' oldest motherboard with onboard gigabit (that honor goes to the original P4C800 Deluxe, which featured gigabit Ethernet from 3Com). Nowadays, *every* nVidia nForce 6-series chipset motherboard includes onboard gigabit (either single or dual) as standard. Only Intel *forces* you to settle for mere onboard FastEthernet (and that's only at the low end)).


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