Upgrading to Gbit LAN - any sense in that?

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  1. Posts : 126
    Windows 7
       #1

    Upgrading to Gbit LAN - any sense in that?


    My mixed network (PC*-Netbook-Notebook-Sat receiver*-Printer*) works OK, but getting files of the set top box (Dream DM8000) is VERY slow (0,041 Mb/sec) through the LAN cable.

    Thinking of upgrading to a faster LAN (currently using the mobo's LAN option) but does it make any sense, the slow current rate considered?
    Do I need different cabling?
    Currently using normal network cable.

    Thanks, Barend :)

    * LAN, rest WLAN
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  2. Posts : 31,249
    Windows 11 Pro x64 [Latest Release and Release Preview]
       #2

    Upgrading the LAN may or May Not improve system transfer but that will depend entirely on the actual hardware involved - If the Sat STB has a network card that is limited to 100 or even 10 MB/s then this will be the maximum speed it will operate at.

    Normal Cat 6 cable should handle the upgrade without issues and you would see a transfer improvement between suitably equipped devices but the connection will always run at the maximum speed of the slowest device involved
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  3. Posts : 387
    Win 7 & 10 x64
       #3

    For example you want to transfer something from one computer to another, both computer have gigabyte internet ports. But your internet speed is no where near the 4 digit zone. Will it transfer at the speed of your internet or the speed of your computer's port?
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  4. Posts : 31,249
    Windows 11 Pro x64 [Latest Release and Release Preview]
       #4

    imeem said:
    For example you want to transfer something from one computer to another, both computer have gigabyte internet ports. But your internet speed is no where near the 4 digit zone. Will it transfer at the speed of your internet or the speed of your computer's port?
    The transfer would take place at the slowest speed in the actual transmission chain

    PC --Router -- PC

    All items (both PC's & Router) must be Gigabit capable to give a gigabit speed ( other factors will produce an actual speed that is less than the theoretical maximum ). If any one item is only at Fast Ethernet (100 Mb/s) then this will be the maximum theoretical transfer speed

    In a case where the internet is part of the chain then the speed will be limited to the upload speed of the PC initiating the transfer. This may be considerably lower than the advertised speed. (normally the d/l speed)
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  5. Posts : 126
    Windows 7
    Thread Starter
       #5

    To clarify:
    Transferring files among the Windows computers (W7, Notebook is XP) is quick enough.
    But fetching films from the Dreambox (Linux based) by means of DCC (Dreambox Control Center) using ftp is sooo slow...
    Could use an external usb HDD to save the recordings to, but I fear transferring these huge HD files from the ext HDD would also be slow, right?
    Or am I not thinking straight and should I be fine as soon as the HDD is part of the desktop TC, where DVR Studio is installed?
    This proggie can burn a Dream file to DVD or blu ray recorder (got both in my PC).
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  6. Posts : 31,249
    Windows 11 Pro x64 [Latest Release and Release Preview]
       #6

    Depends on the actual hardware, as usual, but as the transfer speed of a current standard SATA II drive (internal or External Via eSATA connection) is 3Gb/sec this is far quicker than any normally available network, even USB2 with it's 40 Mb/sec throughput, can beat the 100 Mb/Sec Fast Ethernet
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  7. Posts : 387
    Win 7 & 10 x64
       #7

    don't transferring things between computesr using your network consider as downloading? Like it uses bandwidth
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  8. Posts : 31,249
    Windows 11 Pro x64 [Latest Release and Release Preview]
       #8

    imeem said:
    don't transferring things between computesr using your network consider as downloading? Like it uses bandwidth
    This could be considered as downloading, from one device to the other, but the bandwidth used is not capped or limited in any way, (other than the hardware limitations discussed above), so will not affect any bandwidth limits you have with your ISP for internet use.
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  9. Posts : 3,371
    W10 Pro desktop, W11 laptop, W11 Pro tablet (all 64-bit)
       #9

    Generally, transferring between 2 computers on a network is not considered downloading.

    Think of your network as water pipes. The larger the pipe, the more water can flow. The router is your pump. If 2 PCs connect to the router thru large pipes (both 1G LAN) then water can flow more freely. If 1 PC has a large pipe (1G LAN) and another has a small pipe (100M LAN) then water can't flow any faster between those 2 PCs then the smaller pipe can handle. Now if the router is connected to the internet via an even smaller pipe then water flowing from the internet to either PCs is restricted to the size of the pipe connecting to the internet. Not only that, but both PCs connected to the router must share the connection to the internet so each only get 1/2 the available flow.

    Hope that is a clear explanation.
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  10. Posts : 387
    Win 7 & 10 x64
       #10

    can u transfer between computers without a router? Like connect a Ethernet cable directly to both computers and transfer?
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