Amazon has
Netgear 5-Port Gigabit Ethernet Unmanaged Switch (GS205) on sale for
$11.99.
Shipping is free with Prime or orders of $25 or more.
Thanks community member
rileyman501 for sharing this deal
About this product:- 5 Gigabit Ethernet ports
- Simple plug-and-play setup with no software to install or configuration needed
- Supports desktop or wall mount placement
- 1-year limited hardware warranty
- Energy efficient design compliant with IEEE802.3az
- Silent operation ideal for noise sensitive environment
- 5 10/100/1000 Mbps Gigabit Ethernet ports, up to 10x faster than Fast Ethernet for maximum performance
No longer available:
- Dell Home & Office has Netgear 5-Port Gigabit Ethernet Unmanaged Switch (GS205) on sale for $10.99. Slickdeals Cashback is available for this store (PC extension required, before checkout). Shipping is free.
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Metal case.
MEMORY BUFFER: 1024 Kbits
ADDRESS TABLE SIZE: 4K (or 2K depending on source)
OPERATING TEMPERATURE: 0 - 40C
802.3ab 1000BASE-T Gigabit Ethernet
802.3u 100BASE-TX Fast Ethernet
802.3i 10BASE-T Ethernet IEEE
802.3az Energy Efficient Ethernet
802.3x flow control
Jumbo Frame Support : 9,216 bytes
MTBF (@ 25° C) : 1,386,257 hours
NO QoS support. This means if you are streaming video or using your internet for voice (VOIP) and have people also downloading files it may cause issues.
The metal framed GS105 version of this is rated for twice as many hours (MTBF) at twice the temperature (25C is not realistic, it is 77F).
GS105:
Energy Efficient Ethernet Support (IEEE 802.3az) : Yes
Jumbo Frame Support : Yes
Queue WRR Ratio : 1:2:4:8
MAC Table Size : 2K
Packet buffer size : 128KB
IEEE 802.1p QoS : Yes
Max Power Consumption : 2.7W
Operating Temperature : 50°C
MTBF (hours) : 3,197,945 hours
TP-Link for a bit more money in metal case linked above has all the specs of the netgear GS205 plus jumbo frame of 16K, QoS, and IGMP snooping. TP-Link does not list their MTBF.
Sources:
* https://www.netgear.com/business/...ged/gs105/
* https://www.tp-link.com/us/suppor.../tl-sg105/
* https://www.netgear.com/support/p...GS205.aspx
Corrections and additions are welcome.
This switch isn't very new or anything the box was circa 2010(?) real old
But it comes with a big DC
Is there any improvement on newer
But it comes with a big DC
Is there any improvement on newer
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I would rather have a 10 gigabit switch in a paper mache box then a 1 GB switch in a titanium box
I would rather have a 10 gigabit switch in a paper mache box then a 1 GB switch in a titanium box
No 5G support. If wired internet goes down, it will not switch to phone hotspots. Is this 1995 or what?
I would rather have a 10 gigabit switch in a paper mache box then a 1 GB switch in a titanium box
metal for businesses
MEMORY BUFFER: 1024 Kbits
ADDRESS TABLE SIZE: 4K (or 2K depending on source)
OPERATING TEMPERATURE: 0 - 40C
802.3ab 1000BASE-T Gigabit Ethernet
802.3u 100BASE-TX Fast Ethernet
802.3i 10BASE-T Ethernet IEEE
802.3az Energy Efficient Ethernet
802.3x flow control
Jumbo Frame Support : 9,216 bytes
MTBF (@ 25° C) : 1,386,257 hours
NO QoS support. This means if you are streaming video or using your internet for voice (VOIP) and have people also downloading files it may cause issues.
The metal framed GS105 version of this is rated for twice as many hours (MTBF) at twice the temperature (25C is not realistic, it is 77F).
GS105:
Energy Efficient Ethernet Support (IEEE 802.3az) : Yes
Jumbo Frame Support : Yes
Queue WRR Ratio : 1:2:4:8
MAC Table Size : 2K
Packet buffer size : 128KB
IEEE 802.1p QoS : Yes
Max Power Consumption : 2.7W
Operating Temperature : 50°C
MTBF (hours) : 3,197,945 hours
TP-Link for a bit more money in metal case linked above has all the specs of the netgear GS205 plus jumbo frame of 16K, QoS, and IGMP snooping. TP-Link does not list their MTBF.
Sources:
* https://www.netgear.com/business/...ged/gs105/
* https://www.tp-link.com/us/suppor.../tl-sg105/
* https://www.netgear.com/support/p...GS205.aspx
Corrections and additions are welcome.
I would rather have a 10 gigabit switch in a paper mache box then a 1 GB switch in a titanium box
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The way my tv cabinet is setup, I can't have direct runs so ran one wire previously which went into a switch and then there is a wire going in the wall behind the tv but now behind the TV.
Just wondering at what point a person has to many switches in a row if that makes sense. they are all gigabit btw
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