frontpagephoinix | Staff posted Today 06:07 PM
Item 1 of 5
Item 1 of 5
frontpagephoinix | Staff posted Today 06:07 PM
Netgear 8-Port Gigabit Ethernet Unmanaged Switch
$17
$28
39% offAmazon
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its wise to use several smaller switches vs one big switch in case there is a power surge and/or lightening strike. $20 per switch vs. $100+ even more for larger PoE switches
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its wise to use several smaller switches vs one big switch in case there is a power surge and/or lightening strike. $20 per switch vs. $100+ even more for larger PoE switches
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Multiple switches absolutely DOES help spread & mitigate failure risk -- depending on HOW they're configured and IF you have multipathing/multiple NICs on your devices.
But ALL networking and computing devices should be behind a UPS unit (ideally a pure sinewave unit), ESPECIALLY in places where you're concerned about power surges and/or lightning strikes.
Smaller (cheaper) switches often times have less-than-capable processing chips in them -- if you're just casually connecting 5-8 devices, you'll be fine. But if you push them to the full gigabit amounts, you'll quickly find they won't support more than one or two devices at full-throttle. A larger 16-port or 32-port switch often has beefier chips in them to support multiple devices operating at full speed. And make no mistake, if you're moving files over a network, it's SUPER EASY to saturate a gigabit connection.
Multiple switches when connected in a row can cause additional network latency. And if one of them DOES kick the bucket due to a power surge or unforeseen catastrophe, you'll have the same exact loss of connectivity as if you lost a larger switch....it's a chain, and you're only as strong as your weakest link. Furthermore, it's a nightmare trying to troubleshoot "which switch/port" is acting up if you have a chain of unnamaged switches -- especially factoring in the reduced processing capacity of bargain devices.
If you have a multitude of devices, consider a large "managed" switch and utilize vlans to segment your traffic into logical groupings.
Also, this is NOT a POE switch. You should absolutely expect to spend more money on a switch that supports POE. That's not a detriment -- simply paying more for a device that does more. You get what you pay for.
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