Amazon has
5-Port TP-Link Litewave Gigabit Ethernet Switch (LS1005G) on sale for
$8.97.
Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+ orders.
- Note: Earn 10% back on this item when you pay with your Prime Card (more information). To verify, you should see "Get 5% back, and additional rewards on select items charged to this card" listed in the 'Paying with (your card info)' section at checkout.
Thanks to Community Member
pennysave for sharing this deal.
About this product:
- 5 RJ45 ports with 10/100/1000Mbps speeds
- IEEE 802.3X flow control for reliable data transfer
- Fanless design ensures quiet operation
- Plug & play setup without software installation
- 2.8" x 3.5" x 0.9" inch compact size
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10 Comments
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Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Price
$8.02 lower (47% savings) than the list price of $16.99
$1.02 lower (10% savings) than the previous price of $9.99
Cashback
10% back with Prime Card Bonus [amazon.com] (click to check)
($8.07 after cashback)
*Previous Frontpage Deal at $9.00 with 60 Deal Score and 29 comments.
Customer reviews
4.7⭐ / 7,696
500+ bought in past month
amazon.com/dp/B0863M7C1L [amazon.com]
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I recently built a house and had it wired for Cat 6 Ethernet, with there being 1 wall port in each room. One room in particular I have a desktop PC and an Xbox that I wanted both to have a wired internet connection to which is what required the purchase of this device. It is extremely easy to set up, and with it being "unmanaged", there was no portal I needed to sign into that would require me to mess with settings. It's a very simple "plug-and-play" set up, you simply need to connect an incoming ethernet cable from your router/modem (in any port) and then you can now share that internet connection to 4 other wired devices - that's all there is to it.
One important note is this: if you have a modem-only device (these devices usually only have a single ethernet port on the back) then you are probably needing a router - not a switch. A router is capable of assigning your devices their own internal IP addresses via DHCP - which is important if you don't know how to assign them yourself. It's also what manages your NAT for situations your devices may need to use the same internet port number. While you don't necessarily need to know what all of this means, you need to understand that a switch is not a replacement for a router. If you are a consumer (as opposed to a business) then you're likely considering this switch to extend/add more ports than what your router has (they usually have around 4 or 5). Even the devices that are connected directly to this switch will still be getting their local IP addresses assigned from your router.
The benefit of this switch over a "hub" is that it knows how to route your internet traffic to your devices. So even though it's not responsible for assigning IP addresses to your devices, it knows how to route specific traffic to the devices that require it. It does so lightning-fast - I notice absolutely no additional latency (which is great for gaming) and no compromise in speed either. If you're on the market for a small unmanaged switch, then this is an affordable and excellent choice... A hub, on the other hand, will route all traffic it receives to all devices that are connected to it (they do not 'switch' traffic to specific devices), which essentially requires the devices themselves to ignore the traffic it doesn't want. It adds additional overhead and can potentially cause dropped packets and they just essentially add additional network congestion. I could see a hub being used for something like printers or IoT devices where latency isn't critical, but I think it's ultimately beneficial to just not use them at all even though they might look similar to a switch.
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Yeah, basic 1Gbps switch. Power sipper though at around 3W. In for one to throw in my entertainment console, so I can hardwire the game consoles. The more things off WiFi, the better.
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