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Computer help: Newbie Networking Question

by timholtz - 1/27/08 7:41 AM
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Post 1 of 8

Newbie Networking Question

by timholtz - 1/27/08 7:41 AM

I am going to be setting up a home network and I have a quick question. I have a cable modem connected to a wireless router in one room and what I want to do is run an ethernet cable from the wireless router to another room. Here's my question. In the second room I have a couple of devices that I need connected. So can I plug that cable into a hub/switch/router (not sure of the difference)with a couple extra ports on it in the second room so all my devices can be connected?

Post 2 of 8

(NT) Yes. That's exactly how its done.

by R. Proffitt Moderator - 1/27/08 8:58 AM In reply to: Newbie Networking Question by timholtz

Post 3 of 8

Re: (NT) Yes. That's exactly how its done.

by timholtz - 1/27/08 9:27 AM In reply to: (NT) Yes. That's exactly how its done. by R. Proffitt Moderator

So does anyone know if something like this Linksys SD205 will work?
http://www.linksys.com/servlet/Satellite?c=L_Product_C2&childpagename=US%2FLayout&cid=1123638180556&pagename=Linksys%2FCommon%2FVisitorWrapper&lid=8055622279B14

Just plug the cable from the Wireless router in the other room, and all the devices in that room into any of the ports, and everything should work?

Tim

Post 4 of 8

Nice choice.

by R. Proffitt Moderator - 1/27/08 9:29 AM In reply to: Re: (NT) Yes. That's exactly how its done. by timholtz

Yes, that's a good solution.

Post 5 of 8

The basic difference

by At The Opera - 1/27/08 9:07 AM In reply to: Newbie Networking Question by timholtz

The basic difference between a hub, switch, and router is the following.

Hubs are shared bandwidth. So if you have say 5 devices connected to a hub with a 100Mbps connection, then each of those devices will get a maximum data rate of 20Mbps.

Switches are dedicated bandwidth. It doesn't matter how many devices are connected, each is capable of operating at the 100Mbps connection to the rest of the network. The obvious catch is that if you only have a single 100Mbps link to the rest of the network, multiple devices can't be communicating with the rest of the network at 100Mbps each. So if you have two computers on a switch, each of them is trying to download a large file from another computer somewhere on the network simultaneously, you won't get the full 100Mbps speed on both downloads.

Routers are like smart switches. Switches can route data on a local network, routers can route data from one network to another. So for example, your home LAN to the Internet. Or maybe one branch office to another via some kind of private link.

There's probably some network engineer out there rolling their eyes at my simple explanation, but it should be good enough to help you understand the basics.

Post 6 of 8

Re: The basic difference

by timholtz - 1/27/08 9:45 AM In reply to: The basic difference by At The Opera

So in theory, if I had a switch and two computers connected to it along with the uplink to the rest of the network, two computers accesses the network at the same time would come close to splitting the bandwidth (50Mb/50Mb on a 100Mb network). If only one computer was accessing the network it could use the entire 100Mb, right?

Anyway thank you, I searched the internet for what the difference was and all I could find was extremely technical explainations.

Tim

Post 7 of 8

Sorry, in a switch...

by R. Proffitt Moderator - 1/27/08 9:54 AM In reply to: Re: The basic difference by timholtz

As long as we don't tax the overall bandwidth of said switch with computers A to D, a file copy from A to B and a file copy from C to D at the same time will proceed at full 100 megabit speeds. There is no bandwidth sharing in this scenario.

Bob

Post 8 of 8

Like Bob said

by At The Opera - 1/27/08 10:15 AM In reply to: Re: The basic difference by timholtz

Until you exceed the capacity of the link to the rest of the network, there is no bandwidth splitting or sharing going on.

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