F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Networks Setting up a system to manage a mobile device

Setting up a system to manage a mobile device

Setting up a system to manage a mobile device

X
xxXJolanXxx
Member
221
04-17-2016, 08:00 AM
#1
I've been checking out the ASUS ROG RAMPAGE VI Extreme. One of its many highlights is 10Gbps onboard LAN. Does there exist a home configuration that can handle this card, or should you begin exploring network switches before diving headfirst into complex networking?
X
xxXJolanXxx
04-17-2016, 08:00 AM #1

I've been checking out the ASUS ROG RAMPAGE VI Extreme. One of its many highlights is 10Gbps onboard LAN. Does there exist a home configuration that can handle this card, or should you begin exploring network switches before diving headfirst into complex networking?

O
OG_NAME30
Member
53
04-17-2016, 08:08 AM
#2
Do you have additional options that complement and could use 10G? Such as a server or NAS system? If available, a switch would probably suffice, unless your ISP provides more than gigabit to your home. Brands like Netgear, Asus, Ubiquiti offer 10G prosumer switches.
O
OG_NAME30
04-17-2016, 08:08 AM #2

Do you have additional options that complement and could use 10G? Such as a server or NAS system? If available, a switch would probably suffice, unless your ISP provides more than gigabit to your home. Brands like Netgear, Asus, Ubiquiti offer 10G prosumer switches.

C
CampenBros
Junior Member
27
04-17-2016, 08:59 PM
#3
The core issue is identifying compatible 10Gbps devices for data transfer while managing costs. You'll need to consider budget-friendly switches, Cat6 cables for connectivity, and ensure the hardware supports high-speed communication. It's important to evaluate whether the investment aligns with your specific requirements rather than defaulting to expensive options unless essential features are required.
C
CampenBros
04-17-2016, 08:59 PM #3

The core issue is identifying compatible 10Gbps devices for data transfer while managing costs. You'll need to consider budget-friendly switches, Cat6 cables for connectivity, and ensure the hardware supports high-speed communication. It's important to evaluate whether the investment aligns with your specific requirements rather than defaulting to expensive options unless essential features are required.

F
Finn_006
Junior Member
11
04-18-2016, 01:23 AM
#4
I'm supporting a few friends who are launching a stop motion team. One of them built a computer for me, so I'm the go-to tech expert they trust. I'm not very experienced, but they asked for my help. I'm thinking about using these devices as the foundation for their two workstations—each will run two NUCs handling capture and motion control, with a central server in between. Since a single take can generate up to 10 gigabytes of RAW files, I thought it was important to ensure strong network speed.
F
Finn_006
04-18-2016, 01:23 AM #4

I'm supporting a few friends who are launching a stop motion team. One of them built a computer for me, so I'm the go-to tech expert they trust. I'm not very experienced, but they asked for my help. I'm thinking about using these devices as the foundation for their two workstations—each will run two NUCs handling capture and motion control, with a central server in between. Since a single take can generate up to 10 gigabytes of RAW files, I thought it was important to ensure strong network speed.