Can I put network switches into a sound amp rack?

Posted on January 19th, 2011 by admin in networking switches | 1 Comment »

I am running a lan party (PC Gaming network) and want to be able to safely transport both my 24 port switches and a some cable management panels all in one handy box.

Would an amp road case designed for music equipment be suitable? If not what would?

As long as it’s a 19" rack it should work. You might need to pay attention to whether it’s a square, round, or threaded hole rack. Some racks for telecom equipment are wider (22 or 23" I forget which)

One thing to watch out for is devices that are only mounted at the front but are relatively heavy or deep. when you go over bumps in the road it’s very stressful on the mounting. You could break off the rack mount hardware. Much less of a problem if you have rails that attach at the front and rear of the rack. (which is a function of the rack mount for the equipment and whether the rack has posts in the rear for the back of the rails.

Is a 24 port switch for a computer considered a networking device?

Posted on December 31st, 2010 by admin in networking switches | 1 Comment »

Or is a networking device a router or things that connect you to a network?

i will consider network switches as networking devices as well.

network switches and network hubs?

Posted on December 29th, 2010 by admin in networking switches | 2 Comments »

what are the major differences and similarities of network switches and network hubs? which one would be better in different circumstances?

similarity—-both multiple port density of a single connection
difference—hubs are half duplex
-hubs do not break up collission domains
-hubs do not do address learning and initial flooding of interfaces
-hubs do not use mac address tables to ascertain the port to send packets out through.
-hubs do send every packet out every interface every time.

Can you use a standard networking switch for house phone use?

Posted on December 27th, 2010 by admin in networking switches | 1 Comment »

My entire house has cat5e cabling hard wired to every room, but half the rooms are set up with the cabling as phone lines. All the lines set up for phone are spliced together using little white/red clips. Basically what I want to do is take out all of those clips and put RJ-45 jacks on all the cable ends. Then I want to get two networking switches and plug the main phone line into the first one and plug the internet line into the second one. Essentially I want to be able to take any line and either plug it into the internet switch if I want that particular room to have internet or into the phone switch if I want that room to have a phone. I would have to put RJ-45’s on all the lines so that I could have them carry the internet signal. I know that I can get the networking side of this idea to work I’m just not familiar with phone signals and am not sure if this would work. If I absolutely had to then I could decide which rooms I permanently want phone lines in and which I want internet in and just use the red/white clips for those rooms I want phone in but I would much prefer a highly adjustable system like this.

I’ve tried to be as clear as possible but I’m aware that its a somewhat strange concept and I haven’t been able to find anything on the internet about it. Just to clarify a little but though here are the main things I need to know. Any other advice or information would be a great help. Also if you would like any further clarification feel free to ask me questions.

1.) Can you use a standard networking switch to carry phone line data instead of internet data
2.) Can I wire my main phone in line with an RJ-45 plug (ignoring plug slots that there aren’t wires for) or should I just put an RJ-11 on it and plug that into the switch.

your networking cables can carry telephone data for example voip is one example but you would be able to route your telephone signal to all the jacks but all the jacks would need to be changed and you would have to figure out how to convert that signal

Do Network Switches have fans in them?

Posted on December 26th, 2010 by admin in networking switches | 1 Comment »

I am working at a new office where we have an AOPEN AOW 216 Network switch. It was quite earlier but now makes a noise randomly that sounds like a car engine reeving up. I am wondering if it has a fan in it and something is going wrong with the fan…or if this is just a normal noise these things make.

this model does have a fan.

My broad band connection is working only with one computer. I use INTEX switch for networking. Help?

Posted on December 19th, 2010 by admin in networking switches | 1 Comment »

I have subscribe Reliance broadband. It is working on one computer in a time even I use INTEX networking switch. Later I was used MTNL connection it was work properly with this switch. Any one can help me?

The problem you are having points to bad or wrong configuration.
If you can send a proper detail of what exactly is going wrong i might be able to support you.

What is the difference between these networking switches?

Posted on December 15th, 2010 by admin in networking switches | 2 Comments »

I am needing a networking switch for a cluster supercomputer I am building. I need a networking switch, that can transfer a lot of data at once, but I am confused about witch one to get. What is the difference between 10/100/1000mb/s vs 10/100 + 1000mb/s. I would also would like to know what support for a jumbo frame means. Here are the two switches I am debating between, and i would like to know which one would perform best, and how much difference it would make.

TRENDnet TEG-S224 10/100Mbps Ports + 1000Mbps Uplinks Copper Gigabit Switch 24 x 10/100Mbps Auto-negotiation MDIX Fast Ethernet Ports 2 x 10/100/1000Mbps Auto-negotiation, Auto-MDIX Gigabit Ports 8K MAC Address Table 2.5MB per device Buff

NETGEAR GS116 10/100/1000Mbps ProSafe Gigabit Desktop Switch with Jumbo Frame Support 16 x RJ45 512 Kbytes per port Buffer Memory

The Trendnet has 24 ports that will transmit at a max speed of 100mbps, plus two other ports that transmit at 1000mbps. These two ports are designed for connecting to other switches.

The netgear has 16 ports able to transmit at 1000mbps, so data would be transferred between each host faster with the netgear.

However, if you want super fast transfer speeds you need to go for one of the high end devices from Cisco or Juniper, which can no acheive 40Gbps throughput.

Networking: Better to have multiple CAT6 cable runs with one switch or multiple switches with fewer CAT6 runs?

Posted on December 13th, 2010 by admin in networking switches | 2 Comments »

Is it better to have multiple CAT6 cable runs from one 24-port network switch going directly to computers/components or use an 8-port switch next to my router with CAT6 cable runs going to multiple 4-port desktop switches and my computers/components hooked up to the desktop switches? Is there a speed advantage one way over the other? Is there a speed advantage to plugging components with high-bandwidth requirements directly into my router with CAT6 cable instead of going through a switch to the router’s switch? Will components on separate switches show up as on the same network still? I have a Netgear WNDR3700 router and plenty of CAT6 cable (1000’) and keystone jacks. I have an unfinished basement ATM so it’s not a problem to make the cable runs. I did a little looking on the web but could not find straightforward answers to my questions and I do not know the intricacies of networking. Thanks in advance!

if you are thinking about a system in your basement, i’m guessing you will only have a few devices, so it makes no difference in network efficiency to use either setup… if you had multiple devices all over the place (on the order of 25 to 50, or more) having multiple switches makes more sense.

all the devices on a particular switch are at the same level with each other, so the overhead is minimal, therefore the data thruput between those devices is fastest, but if you need to connect between two devices located on separate switches there needs to be a little more info added to the data header on each packet to keep track of where the data originated from, therefore, adding time to the overall time it takes to move the data.

For instance, if you had a workplace that had an accounting office with 10 devices, and a sales office with 10 devices… giving each office it’s own switch makes transfer of info between the devices within that particular office a faster overall throughput… while still allowing the occasional transfer of info between both offices.

Each switch creates an isolated system… not a sub-net, but something similar to a sub-net at a hardware level.

Juniper RESE EX Trial Campaign – Sample Video

Posted on July 5th, 2010 by admin in networking switches | 1 Comment »

Join Juniper Networks EX Trial Campaign and take your chance to win the brand new Apple® iPad! Get in touch with your local partner today and schedule a EX Series demo/test and create your own video! For additional info and terms & conditions visit: https://www.eventsforce.net/extrial

Duration : 0:5:39

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Arista 7000 Family of data center and cloud networking switches

Posted on July 5th, 2010 by admin in networking switches | No Comments »

Arista 7000 Family of data center and cloud networking switches

Duration : 0:4:29

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