Ethernet is Still Going Strong After 50 Years::The technology has become the standard LAN worldwide

16 points

Why wouldn’t it be?

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13 points

One person wrote an article on it a few weeks ago and for some reason everyone clicked on it, so now similar articles are being written to capitalize on that success.

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14 points

YOU DOUBT THE POWER OF SNAKEY BOI?

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73 points
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Why not? I prefer a hard wired connection over wifi where possible any day. The speeds are more than adequate for 99.9% of needs, it’s pretty secure, what’s not to like?

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37 points

The speeds of wired ethernet are typically faster than wifi, and are consistantly more reliable.

I’ve worked in RF for my entire career, and I’ll always recommend a wired solution as the best option unless the use case requires the hardware to be moving arbitrarily.

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11 points

If it doesn’t move… it deserves a hard line. No point in spending precious wireless capacity on something that’s so well served by a cable.

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1 point

The amount of splitters I’d require and the cost of those splitters tends to be the thing that stops me from doing that

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18 points

Tell me how you didn’t read the article…

Wifi (802.11) is a type of ethernet. Ethernet is the communication specification not the medium.

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132 points

The only bad thing about Ethernet cables is that they’re shaped like a goddamn grappling hook. If I wanna pull an Ethernet cable through my desk, I must understand that every other cable in its path is coming with it.

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132 points

always buy the more expensive ones with the foreskin.

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83 points

The foreskin gets in the way when pulling it out of the port though.

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39 points

Tell me about it.

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I’ve never had that problem 😉

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4 points

I always crimp my own, including using slide-on/slide-off hoods. That way I can back the hood off before plugging it into the port, which keeps it easy to disconnect, and I can slide it back on before pulling it through a tight spot.

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14 points

I’ve never heard it called foreskin, that’s pretty funny, but FYI, the proper term is “boot”. And I’m a big fan of no boots in the rack. They are nice for desks and places cables might be rearranged constantly, but in switches and backs of servers they just slow you down.

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11 points

Almost spit my coffee out god damn was not ready to read that 😂

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17 points

Tape is your friend, it’s how I pull it through walls.

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51 points
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Not to be that person but ethernet is the specification, the “grappling hook” you are referring to is the connector (Rj45 8p8c). Ethernet has a ton of different connectors in the spec from SFP to DE-9 and even HDMI.

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13 points

VGA cables.

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1 point

Get VGA Today! Comes with double grappling action!

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21 points

It works and supports bandwidth well beyond what the vast majority of usecases could ever saturate – and we get new iterations all the time which increase that ceiling. RJ45 connectors and their respective ports are everywhere. Sure, we have “better” types of cables and connectors for networking, but they’re almost always a staggering amount of overkill for the application and are not as common.

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15 points

And don’t make a satisfying click

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2 points
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LC connectors on fiber make a nice click too, that’s the type of ethernet cabling I work with at my dayjob.

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2 points

When did RJ45 last got a relevant update? 1 Gb/s is more than 2 decades old. It is still way more than enough for almost everyone. And it does not need a lot of power to operate.

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9 points

Well you can run 10 Gb/s over RJ45 these days too

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1 point

How much power does that need to run? What does it cost? How many people could actually use that bandwidth? How does it generally compare to fiber optic?

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2 points

They are coming out with new cabling standards to allow multi gbps over extended distances. There is still a lot of room for growth. You are right that nothing more is needed for the average use case though.

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