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by vidarh
3872 days ago
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It's new and pointless at this point for individuals. Very few places will be able to stream anything to them at 10GbE. Most regular harddrives have a bandwidth substantially below that - it takes an expensive RAID or high end SSD to feed a single user at that speed.... For an apartment complex, though, it might be useful to take 10GbE link... Even on the business side - I run racks of servers handling dozens of clients running booking services for several hundred restaurants, and we're using tens of Mbps including really excessive amounts of regular disaster recovery syncs and backups between our two data centres.. Some companies will benefit, but most won't get anywhere near... I think this is more of the case that it doesn't cost them that more to offer to set things up for 10GbE, since these users will mostly be limited by upstream servers that won't send them traffic enough so their bandwidth usage won't go up nearly as much as it theoretically could, so it's part a long term view, part a competitive move to make 1Gbps or less from competitors seem too little or too expensive for what you get. |
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Working remotely, high res video conferencing, screen casting, and even booting a computer remotely over the internet are all big applications for things like this.
With a 10gb connection you could have a computer at home that would boot remotely and be part of a company's network as if you were in the office.