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RitualOfTheTrout - Jan 26, 2004 |
Scared0o0Rabbit | Jan 26, 2004 | |||
100Mbit should be more than plenty by more than a lot. |
racketboy | Jan 26, 2004 | |||
yeah it will be enough. I do it all the time. Although if you're like me, you'll become addicted to speed for stuff like video and you'll be craving gigabit |
IBarracudaI | Jan 26, 2004 | |||
even 10mbit is more than enough for mp3 streaming... hehe |
Curtis | Jan 26, 2004 | |||
Cat5e will take gigabit ethernet, I'm fairly sure. I really don't know of any advantages of Cat6. Perhaps it is more stable over longer runs? |
Scared0o0Rabbit | Jan 26, 2004 | |||
shouldn't be an issue since cat5 is stable up to like 300 feet or something like that without a signal repeater. |
Link Hylia | Jan 26, 2004 | |||
100 Meters ~ 328 feet ~ 109 yards is the theoretical maximum recommended max is 90 meters (295 feet) for 100 Base TX ethernet cable http://www.duxcw.com/faq/network/cablng.htm... repeaters are made for longer runs, or use a network Switch if you need longer runs |
Curtis | Jan 26, 2004 | |||
I think you're getting your bits and bytes muddled, it290. There is no way a modern HD would be maxed out on a 100mbit connection. Realistic throughput on such a connection would be about 1-2 Megabytes per second, given packet overheads, collisions and other overheads. |
racketboy | Jan 26, 2004 | |||||||
Not necesarily streaming. Just copying files to and from my file server Transfering a few gigs can a wait |
it290 | Jan 26, 2004 | |||
Yeah, true. It can take a bit with those large files. And Curtis, I know you're right from a factual standpoint, but it seems like copying large files over the network generally occurs at about the same speed as copying from one HD to another on your average machine. It's probably just a psychological thing, however. |
Curtis | Jan 27, 2004 | |||
Probably. |