And the missing offload features. Which is make it useless to faster internet users.The only feature iirc that is not on the ER-X yet is DPI
Depends what you define as fast.And the missing offload features. Which is make it useless to faster internet users.
If you enable QOS, the ER-X can be faster than the ER-Lite.
Well . . . you still have the ER-8 and ER-pro. They have DPI as well as almost double the performance.But if you don't need QOS ER-Lite is your only choice above 300Mbit.
At double/triple price. A typical soho user never gonna buy them here.. A company will.Well . . . you still have the ER-8 and ER-pro. They have DPI as well as almost double the performance.
I wouldn't go so far as never.At double/triple price. A typical soho user never gonna buy them here.. A company will.
Don't say never. I have heard it many times in the past. The switch from 10 meg to 100meg, "You never will need the kind of speed for home use". I heard it when we switched from 100 meg to 1 Gig, "You never will be able to use that much speed at home". Here we are. It is time to start looking at 10 gig. I know ...we will never need that fast of a port at home. You can now buy multiple internet pipes for home which are faster than a 1 Gig pipe router can deliver. We now need faster routers for home use. They may be expensive at first but the price will come down as always. It was that way on all the other switch outs.
By the time it is needed, the equipment will come down in price too.
I won't say never. I'll just say I think the likelihood of any need for the next several years is low, especially when you can bond a couple of gigabit ports on a switch as a LAGG if necessary. Nobody has a sustained throughput need for 10Gb at home currently, let alone burst, and gigabit Internet is still rare and/or expensive in many locations.
Heck, I'm overjoyed to have an 80/12 connection at a reasonable price.
Seems like we need faster CPUs for what we have. It is so easy to fall out on hardware acceleration. 10Gb connections will guarantee that.
By the time it is needed, the equipment will come down in price too.
I won't say never. I'll just say I think the likelihood of any need for the next several years is low, especially when you can bond a couple of gigabit ports on a switch as a LAGG if necessary. Nobody has a sustained throughput need for 10Gb at home currently, let alone burst, and gigabit Internet is still rare and/or expensive in many locations.
Heck, I'm overjoyed to have an 80/12 connection at a reasonable price.
If 10G was available where i was i would go for it. I already have a router that is fast enough for 20Gb/s of software NAT(10Gb/s full duplex). It will do 300Mb/s of PPTP VPN per connection and would max out at a total of 10Gb/s for PPTP VPN if one could establish enough VPN connections or have enough clients connected to it. If only servers had enough bandwidth available.
I get that browsing doesnt use much internet and having each website being 1GB in size isnt healthy for the client considering the CPU and memory requirements to render such a website but with that much worth of internet you could host your own file servers, game servers, media servers.
1080P at 60 fps pixel streaming requires that much bandwidth.This goes to illustrate my point. You would do it --that doesn't mean you have a need, which is completely different (and my words centered around need). I'm not even talking browsing. I'm talking about how many homes need data transfers at a 10Gbps speed between LAN devices. 4K video doesn't need 10Gbps. I don't know of a household that would be able to take a 10Gbps connection and use its total throughput for more than a handful of seconds at a time, and I'm not talking benchmarking, but real-world usage. The userload/taskload necessary for regular use of that bandwidth is beyond a residential household.
Yes, completely uncompressed 1080p 60fps video is about 3gb/s.1080P at 60 fps pixel streaming requires that much bandwidth.
I use the Nvidia Shield tablet to stream games from my PC to my TV.
With a USB micro Y cable, USB ethernet adapter, and mini HDMI to HDMI cable I connect it to a TV while charging.
I can stream games from my PC just fine at 1080p/60FPS.
This is with a 10/100 link, not even gigabit.
Right, now what realistic scenario would require something like that?nvidia shield works by having the GPU do video encoding and sending it to the nvidia shield which is an ARM based thing that can decode 1080p media. So it only needs 16Mb/s of bandwidth.
But with 10Gb/s internet you could have multiple GPUs from around the network rendering for you (as have been done since core2quad times for private render farms). Besides rendering distributed computing and real time simulation also benefits from that. For the house it means you can run real time simulations and do number crunching.
Relating to rendering, refer to the eGPU guide that is currently on another forum in which it explains the amount of bandwidth needed to have for a GPU connected externally to game using the laptop monitor. 4 PCIe lanes are needed for 60 fps.
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