My experience is that they all work when you plug them in, but the "off
brands" get flaky sooner and work better with most of the ports connected.

YMMV, but I like HP ProCurve. Cisco is great but pricey. Netgear is good,
and Linksys/Belkin/DLink/3com are OK. Avoid the off-the-wall brands for
obvious reasons.

Big price differentiators ...
1- Support for Power over Ethernet adds a bunch of cost. You don't likely
need it unless you will be deploying IP phones, IP webcams, or distributed
wireless access points.

2- "Managed" switches are more expensive. Basically, a "managed" switch
allows you to assign it an IP, has a console where you can control settings,
and can talk SNMP. I prefer to deploy managed switches in a business
setting, because troubleshooting network problems is easier, and because it
is generally advisable (IMO) to set port speeds for servers rather than use
negotiation.




---------
Tom Jedrzejewicz
tomjedrz@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx


On Wed, Dec 8, 2010 at 7:51 AM, Pat Barber <mboceanside@xxxxxxx> wrote:

Has anybody seen any significant differences in the many
Ethernet switches ?

I have gotten in the shopping mode for a client and I can't
believe how many folks are building these things, yet they
all appear to be identical in form and function.
(Over 35 suppliers from my distributor)

I am looking for a simple 12 and 6 port switch(s) and have found
them from $10 to $300, with a few going waaay up in price.

I am talking about a 10/100/1000 wired switch for a very basic
network of 1- 15 devices.

I don't really need the gigabyte version but I thought, why not since
we are doing a whole new deal.

Is the Netgear stuff really any different than the HP Procurve stuff ?

I tend to avoid the really off the wall brands from China but who knows ?



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