Amazon has
TP-Link TL-SG105 5-Port Unmanaged Desktop Switch for
$10.98 when you apply the extra $5 off coupon on the product page.
Shipping is free with Prime or on orders of $35 or more.
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Thanks to Community Member
nosoup4uha for finding this deal.
Features:- One Switch Made to Expand Network 5× 10/100/1000Mbps RJ45 Ports supporting Auto Negotiation and Auto MDI/MDIX
- Plug and Play Easy setup with no software installation or configuration needed
- Advanced Software Features Prioritize your traffic and guarantee high quality of video or voice data transmission with Port-based 802.1p/DSCP QoS and IGMP Snooping
- Study Metal Case Fanless Quiet Design, Desktop or Wall-mounting Design. Operating Temperature: 0 degree Celsius 40 degree Celsius (32 degree Fahrenheit 104 degree Fahrenheit)
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Your router will automatically manage your max internet speed so there's no clear answer or an even breakdown since it changes every second -- each device could be using a different amount of your internet speed every second (they don't need max speed all the time)
If you have 1Gbps internet (which is 1000Mbps or 1000Mb per second) then it doesn't mean you're using full speed every second you're online -- your devices will use what they need up to your max speed and your router will handle how its split if you're trying to use more than 1000Mbps total in any given second
Streaming the highest quality 4K UHD video on Netflix only needs 15Mbps (15Mb per second) which isn't much of your max 1000Mbps internet speed:
https://help.netflix.co
If you were doing heavy downloading of massive amounts of data on 2 devices then most likely your router will give about half the internet speed to each device -- if you have other connected devices then it'll most likely give the other devices what they need before splitting the rest of the internet bandwidth to the 2 heavy usage devices but you never know
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And what if say 2 wifi tablets are used while these other 2 ethernet devices are using data.
Sorry if my scenario doesn't make sense or if I'm clueless AF in my understanding of it.
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And what if say 2 wifi tablets are used while these other 2 ethernet devices are using data.
Sorry if my scenario doesn't make sense or if I'm clueless AF in my understanding of it.
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These things pull bandwidth evenly as far as I can tell. What I mean is if ports are filled they give priority bandwidth pull to the ports that come before.
It doesn't make sense to think this thing would automatically divide that 1Ghz down to 200mb each for the 5 ports that are there.
And what if say 2 wifi tablets are used while these other 2 ethernet devices are using data.
Sorry if my scenario doesn't make sense or if I'm clueless AF in my understanding of it.
It's similar to how cable modems give everyone the same bandwidth even though the wiring is shared.
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Your router will automatically manage your max internet speed so there's no clear answer or an even breakdown since it changes every second -- each device could be using a different amount of your internet speed every second (they don't need max speed all the time)
If you have 1Gbps internet (which is 1000Mbps or 1000Mb per second) then it doesn't mean you're using full speed every second you're online -- your devices will use what they need up to your max speed and your router will handle how its split if you're trying to use more than 1000Mbps total in any given second
Streaming the highest quality 4K UHD video on Netflix only needs 15Mbps (15Mb per second) which isn't much of your max 1000Mbps internet speed:
https://help.netflix.co
If you were doing heavy downloading of massive amounts of data on 2 devices then most likely your router will give about half the internet speed to each device -- if you have other connected devices then it'll most likely give the other devices what they need before splitting the rest of the internet bandwidth to the 2 heavy usage devices but you never know
Leave a Comment