Introduction to 10 Gigabit Home Networking – Why it is finally time to deploy high speed networking at home or the small business office. This video covers important concepts to understand why you might need a 10Gb network and where you would use it effectively.
Part 1 – Introduction |
Part 2 – Peer-to-Peer |
Part 3 – Build A Switch |
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Gear:
10Gb Network Interface Card:
Direct Attach Copper Cable:
Cat6 Cable for 10Gb (180ft max):
Cat6a Cable for 10Gb (330ft max):
10Gb Switching:
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35 پاسخ به “10Gb Home Network (P1) – Introduction”

  1. Not just with specific point to point connections but also for network backbone between switches and other appliances. Having a 1Gb switch in one area and having it up-link to the router or firewall with a fiber or copper 10Gb back bone helps a ton with aggregation and latency even if the end point device like a workstation or media server doesn't have a 10Gb NIC. If you had a server on the network with a 10Gb NIC on top of that you would still see improvements in transfer rate at the client over just having 1Gb network throughout.

  2. Throw in a DELL 0272F MELLANOX CONNECTX-4 100GBE DUAL PORT NIC for $350.00 and you'll have 10/100/1000/10000/100000 Ethernet capability.

  3. Amazing how dated these videos get, now we have cheap SSDs, cheap ram and cheap cpu cores but weirdly, 10gbe is STILL fuking expensive.

  4. Thank you for posting this video. A lot of useful information. You sir have a new subscriber. Keep up the great work.

  5. Yeah, the price is insane… A single pcie network card is still like $120 and then you have to by a cable spool, crimper, and all the ends which adds another $500. So you are looking at $1000 just to do a small 1000 sqft area with 2 computers. It is currently (as of 2/2019) more economical to do LACP with regular cabling on manageable switches.

  6. 4:165:00 As you mentioned this is a complicated topic but I'm happy you pointed out all factors. I think you probably know already it boils down to the hashing algorithm. Some Juniper platforms support using L4 hashing algorithms that would utilize multiple links for one "session". Although I haven't seen this on any other platform and wish it was available more commonly. Great video!

  7. actually VERY VERY FEW people actually need 10GBPS networks … interesting but for home use is kind of unnecessary.

  8. Point-to-point between two computers is easy and cheap–two used 10G NICs and a cable. But if you want a third machine, you need a switch (or messy forwarding/routing among the computers), which has been expensive. Mikrotik has a 4-port SFP+ switch now for under $150, making it somewhat more cost-effective to network a few machines with 10G links.

  9. 2 years out and it's still not cost effective.

  10. Merkt euch alle Deutschland hat das schlechte Internet der Welt warum läuft ihr das was es nicht bringt

  11. 0:54 How many twisted pair cables? :)))

  12. He's not considering ROI at all; yes, 10 gb is awesome but it's still relatively expensive to implement in mid-2018 even just adding a 10gbNIC to your NAS and computer and doing a direct connect crossover; so it's not even really networking… my opinion is 1 gbps is perfect for home still, no home user (w/ exceptions such as leasers / etc that essentially operate a MDW out of their house) will ever get a valuable ROI on upgrading to 10 gbps, buttttttt not gonna argue a home office that serves clients on a WAN or geek who doesn't fiscally care totally might…

  13. I've actually gone backwards. I had a 1Gbit ethernet in 2005, but now I have a 100Mb ethernet because that's what my ISP's modem/router does.

  14. So you're telling me that you don't have your place rigged up with fiber yet? So Sad.

  15. Great video but you definitely need to clarify some stuff. In this video you mix SAN (Storage area network) and LAN (local area network) with all of their purposes and standards together. Where realistically they are separate systems and dont work together. With switches, SFP's, and network cards there are ethernet based and fiber channel based. Fiber channel is exclusively for SAN and ethernet is obviously LAN. The two wont mix and can result in wasted money in parts or confusion with it not working. A SAN network is only for providing storage and cannot be used for regular network traffic. At my office we have 10gbs LAN network with fiber switches for ethernet to connect servers together and run one line to 20pcs we also have a 10gbs fiber SAN fabric network which is used to provide storage for VM's and thin clients. They are separate systems and used for very diffrent purposes. If you want more information about this feel free to contact me or "back yard tech" and "Eli the computer guy" both have great SAN vs LAN videos.

  16. That's right.. talk to people like they're stupid.. That always sells your point well. Ahem… not.

  17. Haha this is some of the dumbest shit I've seen on youtube, congrats

  18. great video have a few questions 1 what 10gb dual card would work in a dell r815 and a dell R510

  19. I need this for my freenas box

  20. Yeah, I’m going to build a 10G LAN so my daughters and I can play State of Decay 2 without lag.

  21. Nice video. A lot of clicking in the audio. Are you using a nose gate or just really chopping up the audio? Leave your inhales in before speaking in the audio track. It makes for a much more natural sounding dialog.

  22. Yeah right at $1500 for a 10g switch ….. we can wait a little longer.

  23. I was hopeful that there would be more videos to come. Anything in the works?

  24. 1. I don't have the Money for 10Gb Ethernet NICs and Switches
    2. I don't have the Money for a 4TB SSD (I use a 4TB HDD in my NAS)
    3. I don't have a PC that can handle 100% 10Gb Ethernet

  25. I work at a Aquantia and we supply Intel, Cisco, Dell, HPE, Lenovo and even Apple with our 5G or 10Gpcs Ethernet controllers. We will be launching soon a PCIe 10G Ethernet adapter for under $100. Loved the video. It's all about market timing. We all want faster network speeds and various pieces of the ecosystem are there but others are coming quickly behind. Join the 10G revolution!

  26. 2007 is now 11 years ago… I still have 10Mb/s down, .75Mb/s over dsl up & no ethernet lol. America is screwed internet wise.

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