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Buffalo Intros Tiny USB-Powered 3 Port Ethernet Switch
Buffalo Japan rolled out a tiny, pocketable Ethernet switch in the LSW-TX-3EP/C. With three 10/100 Mbps ports to spare, the switch draws power from a USB port, or any other 5V DC source. The USB power input adds portability, letting you build a small LAN anywhere at higher and more reliable speeds than ad-hoc wireless networks. You can grab one for JPY 2280 (US $24.50) when it starts selling later this month.
http://www.techpowerup.com/img/09-07-08/20a_thm.jpg http://www.techpowerup.com/img/09-07-08/20b_thm.jpg Source: Akihabara |
Cool. I would certainly prefer this to ad-hoc wireless.
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cool beans
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shame its only 10/100mbps you want at least 10 through to 1000mbps...
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No matter the speed 100 is fine enough for anything. This is much better than carrying around a big router and the AC adapter for it. Specialy for those last minute mini lans.
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this looks like just what i need to network my crunching rigs when i get them running again. It would great to get the big POS that i am using now out
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yes, but...
So you can connect in total 3 PC's. And with 2 of those, 5. Well is nice. To bad no 1GB/s ports for those who wants to tranfer big data.
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I think you're mistaking Mb and MB again. 10Mb = 1.25MB 100Mb = 12.5MB 1000Mb = 125MB |
This is perfect for simple and quick LAN/WAN sharing... or even testing.
Im sure 1Gb will be out in no time. And yes, only 2 PC's at a time can share a connection. |
The file transfering speed is dependant on the speed of the slowest drive being used to transfer. Most platter drives have a sustained rate of about 80-90MB/s
And your math must be wrong becasue i transfer way faster than that on a 10/100 network. |
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Mussels' numbers are spot on for theoretical maxes, except, the overheads involved in networking, don't even allow you to achieve maximum throughput on the network, so the real world numbers are actually lower. I have a true Gb network, and I only usually get around 90MB/s throughtput, on the fastest sections of 2 RAID 0 arrays. |
you tend to get closer to 1/10th instead of 1/8th, so 100Mb gets you 10MB/s, and so on.
On my gigabit network, i can read at 90-110MB/s, but its usually held back by whatever i'm writing to. (just because you have a raid 0 array to read off that can do 125MB/s, doesnt mean squat if you're writing to a drive that can only write at 60MB/s) |
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i'm running short cat 6 cables, which may be a boost to mine. i still get 90-110MB/s read off a single samsung, :P
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um, ok so this is just laning correct? only 2 pc's can connect correct? then why not just use a cross over ethernet from 1 pc ethernet port to the other pc's port instead of paying for this lil ethernet switch?
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You can use this with one going to a router, and two for the PC's - allows you to share intarwebs and such. admittedly you can do this with a regular switch, but this is more convenient using USB power, for a laptop user. |
oh haha, i thought it was just usb cord in one end for power with the 2 ethernet ports for small LAN...(looks back over thread and "pics") course i just kinda read the part of only 2 computers and assumed only LAN lol.
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http://www.dual-comm.com/ http://www.usbdiscount.com/nbt-555.html http://www.blackbox.com/Store/Detail...Switch/LBS005A |
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