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by zrm
53 days ago
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The original problem was that everyone runs copper instead of fibre because there are too many existing devices that only have copper. Running both everywhere would require you to buy and terminate twice as much cable as you expect to use, which leads people to running only copper again. If you chose PCs to begin with that come with fibre ethernet or put quality cards in the ones that matter then you could make fibre the default instead of copper. Until you have a number of devices like printers or VoIP phones or Raspberry Pis that have no need for 10Gbps or even 1Gbps connectivity, they just need a way to be plugged in at all. If you need to add $100+ in conversion expense to each of those devices, you're back to using copper by default. |
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Ah. Let's play with that logic a bit:
"Running Ethernet cabling everywhere would require you to buy and terminate far more than twice as much cable as you expect to use. Just run power cables and wire up one extra outlet for a HomePlug in each room.".
Yeah, that checks out. "Powerline Ethernet" devices are actually pretty good these days, and are right around your magic price range... Amazon has them at ~13 USD per unit. [0] Why would anyone bother running a second cable to each room? Thirteen bucks per room has to be way less than the materials and labor cost for the cable run. Doing anything else is, like, really stupid. Don't you agree?
Anyway. You expect to use the cabling that you plan to install... plus some extra for screwups, man.
[0] <https://www.amazon.com/Linksys-PLEK500-Homeplug-AV2-Powerlin...>