Small office/home network [message #299394] |
Tue, 27 November 2007 12:48 |
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reborn
Messages: 3231 Registered: September 2004 Location: uk - london
Karma: 0
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General (3 Stars) |
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I have only ever set up a small LAN at home, I once set up a router for a wireless notebook and a PC for my mum and dad and found wireless to be a really lame connection due to the conditions and environment it was set up in.
I also have a very small LAN at my home between a laptop and PC using a cat5 crossover cable just so I can exchange data between the two computers. This happens to be really slow as the laptop doesn't have a NIC, so I had to use a USB NIC which is slower then anything i've ever witness before, but it works...
Now I want to set up a proper home network.
I have a DSL cable connection of 20mbps through a cable modem. I have one laptop which I want to be on the nework wirelessly. I have my main PC which I want connected to the network, and I have an older PC that has allot of storage space, which would primarily be used to store porn, erm I mean legal movies and music.
The two PC's have 1gig NIC cards, and from experiance I know i'm going to want the PCMCIA card for the laptop to be N class, allowing speeds up to 300mb.
I want the router to also act as a hardware firewall. And I want to be able to set the speed of each port. Meaning that I want to be able to cap the speed of my girlfriends laptop whilst I am downloading my porn. I mean legal movies.
Whilst ATM I want it to support only two PC's and a laptop, I want it to be scalable. So I can add more devices to the network later on. More then likely a networked printer and possibly another PC for media entertainment, I don't suppose any serious gaming console will now come out without the need for a connection either, so I would like it ideally to support up to eight network devices.
Any suggestions and/or forseeable pitfulls would be welcome.
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Re: Small office/home network [message #299439 is a reply to message #299394] |
Tue, 27 November 2007 15:09 |
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I would suggest either
Or just getting an ADSL router and sharing the connection through that, like I do, i think that's a little faster, but may well be more expensive, but as I'm talking to the guy who has a Quad SLI setup, cash doesn't appear to be short.
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halokid wrote on Mon, 11 October 2010 08:46 |
R315r4z0r wrote on Mon, 11 October 2010 15:35 |
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the hell is that?
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Re: Small office/home network [message #299569 is a reply to message #299394] |
Wed, 28 November 2007 05:55 |
=HT=T-Bird
Messages: 712 Registered: June 2005
Karma: 0
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Colonel |
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My experience tells me that consumer routers tend to be horrendous(yes, even Linksys gear can be weirdo at times). Take a look at a Cisco SBR100-K9 if you really want something good...(but it's 10/100, so you'll need a separate GbE switch)
HTT-Bird (IRC)
HTTBird (WOL)
Proud HazTeam Lieutenant.
BlackIntel Coder & Moderator.
If you have trouble running BIATCH on your FDS, have some questions about a BIATCH message or log entry, or think that BIATCH spit out a false positive, PLEASE contact the BlackIntel coding team and avoid wasting the time of others.
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