Its not the "cool" factor. I have passed that age. Its really a need in 2-5 years down the road for me and i don't want to mess with the cables again for the next 10-15 years.
Once again, cabling I get and agree with. Install Cat 6 to a patch panel. You don't need a 1 gbps backbone though IMHO.
Agree with you. I reckon that the 1 Gbps to each home is meant for triple plays. Not only downloading or BT.
So, then the only reason you are doing this is solely for file transfers since your online usage is very unlikely to ever eat up even a 100 mbps link.
I need high bandwidth from any room to any room because we stream mts/m2ts files, music from the NAS to any PCs/Notebooks in any room. When my siblings come over, we exchange those files from any location in the unit because we don't know which space is free to be used when all the kids are all over the places. Phew.
I am sick and tired of using homeplug (85Mbps) and wireless N as they restrict me to a single location (wireless) and the speed are low (Homeplug). It may take many hours to transfer those files. Sometimes, they purchase a new products, e.g., Archos 7 or new external HDD and they want all those large files in my NAS too. Phew, another round of hours transferring.
Wireless N would not restrict you to a single location, hence why it's wireless
. You might be limited in your range to get the full Wireless N speeds, but it's not just one spot
.
So, you do a lot of large file transfers from external drive>host PC>over the network>NAS? Any reason you don't just take the external drive and put it in the NAS? Do all your PC's have gigabit nics? How about your home theater (TV/Blu-Ray/etc)? Are you going to change all that stuff when it gets gigabit just so you can have gigabit? If so, more power to ya
Thanks for this info. But i reckon and hope that the big boys from US would open shops here and offer HD video contents which may require high bandwidth for each STB. Currently, HD content providers offer high PQ but low SQ, i.e., not TrueHD or DTS HD MA codecs. I hope that the day will come soon when these codecs are available over the internet. And these codecs requires about 5Mbps/channel for audio + 24Mbps for Picture. That would be about 5X8 channels = 40Mbps + 24Mbps = 64Mbps for each HD STB.
Where do you see 5 mbps/channel for audio?
Regardless, you are now talking about TV which (in the States at least) isn't done over a TCP/IP network from the provider. Everything is coax (RG6/56 IIRC), and done entirely seperate from any kind of IP based networking. In the future they are planning to move to IPTV, but even then things will be compressed in some form.
I'd be curious to see once all this stuff is setup/deployed in your area and all that, I'd love to see a usage history for an average week taken at your router (or the ISPs).
Then kids nowadays are multitaskers. They are doing so many things on their PC at the same time. So, 1Gbps for home network in 2-5 year time is barely enough. :\
I don't know what they are multitasking with, but there seems to be something wrong if they are actually consuming 1 gbps in bandwidth... That's just IMO of course.
Good luck with this, and let us know how it turns out.