Quote:
Originally Posted by dida2010
Hi
Thanks for your help
Live in a condo , i can run one long cable between the rooms , and add a switch next to each TV.
Does one cat5e hold all the streaming being used simultaneously , no buffering?
Or
is it better for quality purpose to get 3 cat5e, between the main Router conected giga to my pc, to each hd 300?
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1 cable will be fine. Unless you are using multiple NICs inside your PC, you will only have one Cat5e cable coming out of your PC in the first place, so splitting out to 3 long cables won't help anything.
The best method really depends on how your apartment is laid out and what devices you have to connect on the network.
For a simple network, I would do as follows:
<-Coax Cable-> to [Cable Modem / Router] to <-Cat5e-> to [GB Ethernet Switch]
Then connect from the switch to your Server PC, Extenders, etc. with one Cat5e cable going to each device.
If you have a bunch of stuff on one end of your house and a bunch of stuff on the other end of your house, put a GB Ethernet switch in each location and have one long Cat5e cable to connect the two switches.
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Server: Ryzen 2400G with integrated graphics, ASRock X470 Taichi Motherboard, HDMI output to Vizio 1080p LCD, Win10-64Bit (Professional), 16GB RAM
Capture Devices (7 tuners): Colossus (x1), HDHR Prime (x2),USBUIRT (multi-zone)
Source: Comcast/Xfinity X1 Cable
Primary Client: Server Other Clients: (1) HD200, (1) HD300
Retired Equipment: MediaMVP, PVR150 (x2), PVR150MCE, HDHR, HVR-2250, HD-PVR
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