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dcmbrown
Guest
Our office is moving to a new building within the next couple of months and we're in the process of finalizing a number of things including the network. The building is 3 stories with approximately 250 drops spread out mostly over the top two floors with 3 drops per wall plate in most places for approximately 85 spots. Around 70 of these are designated for desks spots, while the rest are distrbuted for phones, printers, wireless, etc. We're a corporate web development firm so we a fair amount of audio work and some video but not a huge amount. I have no set budget to accomplish this as our IT department always seems to be a seat of the pants after-thought.
I've worked on a number of networks both large and small but have not had the chance to design one myself before.
Originally the plan as discussed with the architect was to create a combined data/voip gigabit network with a 10GbE fibre backbone with stacked switches on each floor to prevent having to have a foot or larger hole running between the floors for all of the cables for the drops ending in the server room. We could have a one inch hole for better use of space (not to mention fire regulations).
Is a 10GbE backbone on a gigabit network total overkill however? Right now we're running (slowly at times) on a 100MbE network to the desktop with a 1GbE connection to a couple of spots and between the servers (eg. our backup server and everything else). It's certainly possible we could need this sort of backbone in 5 years although mainly just in the server room where switches can simply be stacked.
On the otherhand, since coaxing up a ~$20k to ~$30k purchase may be difficult (since the upfront cost totals usually scare people even though it'd probably financed out at < $1000/month), I can probably build a 4Gbs or 8Gbs network using link aggregation for half the price.
Looking at VOIP calculations, it seems rather low that if everyone were talking to each other at the same time, we'd use less than 1.5MB/s (13440kbps) of bandwidth. I'm using this one here for a very rough estimate:
http://www.erlang.com/calculator/lipb/
I've worked on a number of networks both large and small but have not had the chance to design one myself before.
Originally the plan as discussed with the architect was to create a combined data/voip gigabit network with a 10GbE fibre backbone with stacked switches on each floor to prevent having to have a foot or larger hole running between the floors for all of the cables for the drops ending in the server room. We could have a one inch hole for better use of space (not to mention fire regulations).
Is a 10GbE backbone on a gigabit network total overkill however? Right now we're running (slowly at times) on a 100MbE network to the desktop with a 1GbE connection to a couple of spots and between the servers (eg. our backup server and everything else). It's certainly possible we could need this sort of backbone in 5 years although mainly just in the server room where switches can simply be stacked.
On the otherhand, since coaxing up a ~$20k to ~$30k purchase may be difficult (since the upfront cost totals usually scare people even though it'd probably financed out at < $1000/month), I can probably build a 4Gbs or 8Gbs network using link aggregation for half the price.
Looking at VOIP calculations, it seems rather low that if everyone were talking to each other at the same time, we'd use less than 1.5MB/s (13440kbps) of bandwidth. I'm using this one here for a very rough estimate:
http://www.erlang.com/calculator/lipb/