Before
switches became available, devices called
hubs were common.
Hubs were less intelligent network devices that always copied all frames to all ports.
By only copying frames to the destination ports, switches utilize network bandwidth much more effectively than hubs did.
A
10/100 mbps is a good choice these days for basic home networks. This kind of hub will allow you to hook up 10Mbps and 100Mbps devices and network cards on the same network. Furthermore, even if the devices communicate at different speeds, the hub will allow them to talk. Now that the prices have come down to under $50.00, the versatility and speed of these hubs can not be beat.
10/100 Ethernet Hubs are only half duplex - each client can only send OR receive data at a particular time. To take full advantage of your 10/100 Ethernet cards, look into an Ethernet Switch. A switch can operate at full duplex allowing your computers to send and receive at the same time.
- hub
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A 10/100 Ethernet switch can be considered a faster version of a 10/100 Ethernet hub. Recently switches have come down so far is price that they are readily accessible to consumers.
Ethernet switches allow your Ethernet cards to operate in Full Duplex mode instead of Half Duplex. Full Duplex means that you can be sending and receiving data at the same time. Switches also route traffic directly between ports instead of broadcasting traffic across all ports. This basically means that each port on a switch gets dedicated bandwidth instead of shared bandwidth. When transferring large files between multiple computers, this can make a big difference in how well your lan operates.
Consumer level switches now run only about 20% more than hubs making them a great deal for the speed. Switches are also being incorporated into many of the popular DSL / Cable modem routers being manufactured. I would not be surprised to see some network gear manufacturers stop producing consumer level hubs in the next year or so.
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