Moving into house wired house: questions
I've just bought a house that has Ethernet to essentially every room (assume there are 12 wall jacks). It'll certainly be a technical step up from my current home, an 80 year-old house with ancient wiring and endless wireless dead zones.
Having looked at the set up the current owners have, it appears that they didn't use the wiring much; the cable modem is connected to a 4-port consumer router and the remaining 8 cables are just unconnected. Gotta change that.
So, my plan is to deploy the following:
- 2 computers, both of which will be in one room
- Media storage -- something like a Drobo; location of that can be flexible
- Several connected devices at the main television (TiVo, a connection to the media storage, a Sonos, maybe the TV itself)
- One connected device at 2 additional televisions (likely a connection to the media storage)
- 3-4 Sonos units, in addition to the one with the main television
- A wireless network, using my existing AirPort Extreme + several Airport Express units if necessary to extend the network
So, let's assume that I'm using all 12 jacks, that most of the jacks only have one thing connected, but that a few of the jacks will have 2-4 things connected.
As you might guess from the set-up, the system will be used to distribute video (via media storage to some sort of boxes) and audio (via Sonos) throughout the house, will be used for the two wired computers to connect to the internet, will be used for various wireless devices to connect to the internet, and will be used for a few entertainment devices to connect to the internet (e.g., TiVo to Netflix).
It'll all be connected to a Comcast cable modem. They offer speeds from "up to" 15 Mbps to "up to" 50 Mbps. I'll probably start off with 15 and see how well that serves us.
I'm technically adept, but don't happen to know much about home networking yet.
Is the best solution to simply put the 12 cables into an unmanaged switch, put the switch into a router, and put the router into the cable modem? (Plus some small unmanaged switches at the jacks that need more than one connection.) Will the Airport Extreme be sufficient as the router in those circumstances? Do I gain anything by plugging some connections (e.g., the connection going to the office with the 2 computers) directly into the router, instead of the switch? Do I gain anything by having 2 8-port switches vs. 1 16-port switch? Do I gain anything by using a managed or smart switch (I don't think I'd take advantage of the capabilities..).
Happy to answer any questions to provide better advice.
Thanks!
I've just bought a house that has Ethernet to essentially every room (assume there are 12 wall jacks). It'll certainly be a technical step up from my current home, an 80 year-old house with ancient wiring and endless wireless dead zones.
Having looked at the set up the current owners have, it appears that they didn't use the wiring much; the cable modem is connected to a 4-port consumer router and the remaining 8 cables are just unconnected. Gotta change that.
So, my plan is to deploy the following:
- 2 computers, both of which will be in one room
- Media storage -- something like a Drobo; location of that can be flexible
- Several connected devices at the main television (TiVo, a connection to the media storage, a Sonos, maybe the TV itself)
- One connected device at 2 additional televisions (likely a connection to the media storage)
- 3-4 Sonos units, in addition to the one with the main television
- A wireless network, using my existing AirPort Extreme + several Airport Express units if necessary to extend the network
So, let's assume that I'm using all 12 jacks, that most of the jacks only have one thing connected, but that a few of the jacks will have 2-4 things connected.
As you might guess from the set-up, the system will be used to distribute video (via media storage to some sort of boxes) and audio (via Sonos) throughout the house, will be used for the two wired computers to connect to the internet, will be used for various wireless devices to connect to the internet, and will be used for a few entertainment devices to connect to the internet (e.g., TiVo to Netflix).
It'll all be connected to a Comcast cable modem. They offer speeds from "up to" 15 Mbps to "up to" 50 Mbps. I'll probably start off with 15 and see how well that serves us.
I'm technically adept, but don't happen to know much about home networking yet.
Is the best solution to simply put the 12 cables into an unmanaged switch, put the switch into a router, and put the router into the cable modem? (Plus some small unmanaged switches at the jacks that need more than one connection.) Will the Airport Extreme be sufficient as the router in those circumstances? Do I gain anything by plugging some connections (e.g., the connection going to the office with the 2 computers) directly into the router, instead of the switch? Do I gain anything by having 2 8-port switches vs. 1 16-port switch? Do I gain anything by using a managed or smart switch (I don't think I'd take advantage of the capabilities..).
Happy to answer any questions to provide better advice.
Thanks!
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