#465 in Computer networking products

Reddit mentions of NETGEAR 8-Port Gigabit Smart Managed Pro Switch, 53w, PoE, ProSAFE Lifetime Protection (GS110TPv2)

Sentiment score: 4
Reddit mentions: 8

We found 8 Reddit mentions of NETGEAR 8-Port Gigabit Smart Managed Pro Switch, 53w, PoE, ProSAFE Lifetime Protection (GS110TPv2). Here are the top ones.

NETGEAR 8-Port Gigabit Smart Managed Pro Switch, 53w, PoE, ProSAFE Lifetime Protection (GS110TPv2)
Buying options
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    Features:
  • GIGABIT ETHERNET - 8-port Gigabit switch with 2 Gigabit SFP ports in a small and sturdy desktop form factor
  • POWER-OVER-ETHERNET - 8 Gigabit PoE ports (802.3af) providing up to 15.4w per port with 46w total PoE power budget. PoE-capable on all Ports of the Switch .With optional External power supply to reach PoE budget of 720W
  • COMPREHENSIVE LAYER2 NETWORKING – VLAN, QoS, IGMP Snooping, rate limiting, Link aggregation, STP, SNMP and ACL
  • EASY MANAGEMENT - Setup, configure and monitor with easy-to-use web-browser based interface and IPv6 management supported
  • SILENT OPERATION - Fan-less switch for perfectly silent operation
  • PROSAFE LIFETIME PROTECTION - Lifetime Limited Hardware warranty, Next Business Day Replacement and 24/7 chat with a NETGEAR expert
Specs:
ColorBlack
Height3.35 Inches
Length10.63 Inches
Number of items1
Size08 Port | 053W
Weight2.92 Pounds
Width6.46 Inches

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Found 8 comments on NETGEAR 8-Port Gigabit Smart Managed Pro Switch, 53w, PoE, ProSAFE Lifetime Protection (GS110TPv2):

u/rubs_tshirts · 3 pointsr/sysadmin

Not really... switch / gbic module / fiber (very superficial amazon search)

u/SirEDCaLot · 2 pointsr/VOIP

Your problem is most likely your router, not the switches. Whenever bad VoIP call quality is an issue, 99.9% of the time it's lack of Quality of Service (QoS, aka traffic shaping) on the router.

Switch QoS won't help you in this case. QoS on a managed switch is to prioritize traffic when an uplink gets saturated. So for example if you have two switches, and only one gigabit uplink between them, switch QoS will determine what gets priority for that gigabit uplink. It won't help for a sub-gigabit Internet connection.

I don't think Airport Extreme supports QoS.

Meraki switches are way overpriced. If you're going to replace something with Meraki, replace your router. Personally I'm not a fan of Meraki because if you stop paying them your whole network goes dead, but that's your choice.

As for non-Meraki- you have a few options including mine, each recommending the system that person is most familiar with.

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My recommendation: This will be a fairly inexpensive way to do this, but not one that's lacking in features. I suggest a Netgate APU4. The APU4 is a small appliance that runs pfSense, an AWESOME open source BSD-based router/firewall distro. You'd keep the AirPort for wireless, but just make it not act as a router or DHCP server anymore.

If you want to give it a try without investing, grab a spare old PC and put a second network card in it, then download pfSense from www.pfsense.org and set that up. Your old PC will work fine as a router until you get a real piece of hardware like an APU. I have such a thing running in production right now where an older firewall failed. Then if you buy an APU you can just backup the config from your old PC and restore it to the APU.

I'd also suggest a powered switch for your IP phones. If you do that, it might be a good time to upgrade to Gigabit. Two budget options that I've worked with which won't break the bank:

If you want to upgrade all your switching and be future-proof:
Netgear GS728TP 24 port plus 4x SFP, all gigabit, all powered

Or if you just want a few PoE ports and aren't expecting much expansion:
Netgear GS110TPv2 8 ports plus 2x SFP, all gigabit, all powered

Now lots of people hate Netgear switches, and admittedly the Netgear web UI is a bit funky. However as long as you update the firmware first thing after getting them, they DO work reliably. Just stay in the ProSafe Smart switch category and avoid the "Unmanaged Plus" switches.

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Hope that helps! Feel free to ask if you have any questions...

u/uncommonLobster · 2 pointsr/sysadmin

At that price point, I didn't think there would be much. If you can live with Netgear and TP-Link devices, these might work for you.

TP-Link 8-Port Gigabit PoE Easy Smart Managed Switch with 55W 4-PoE Ports IEEE 802.3af compliant (TL-SG108PE)

https://www.amazon.com/TP-Link-Gigabit-Lifetime-compliant-TL-SG108PE/dp/B01BW0AD1W/ref=sr_1_3?keywords=4+port+managed+switch+poe&qid=1558541134&s=gateway&sr=8-3

NETGEAR 8-Port Gigabit Smart Managed Pro Switch, 53w, PoE, ProSAFE (GS110TPv2)

https://www.amazon.com/NETGEAR-Gigabit-Lifetime-Protection-GS110TPv2/dp/B00LW9A328/ref=sr_1_4?keywords=4+port+managed+switch+poe&qid=1558541134&s=gateway&sr=8-4

u/chad4800 · 1 pointr/HomeNetworking

This 10 port PoE Netgear has served me well. It's manageable.
I am now using this switch to bypass my Google Fiber network box by configuring two separate VLANs.

I recently picked up a used 48 port PoE Nortel switch (5520-48P-PWR) on eBay for $60 including shipping. This one of course is rack mountable, and has more PoE ports than I will ever need.

Edit: Made a spelling correction

u/-twenty · 1 pointr/networking

NetGear GS110TP. Gigabit POE with two SFP's. $160 on Amazon

u/joey52685 · 1 pointr/homedefense

Honestly you could spend just a little more and get a gigabit switch.

NETGEAR ProSAFE GS110TP 8-Port PoE Gigabit Smart Managed Switch with 2 Gigabit SFP Ports 53w (GS110TP-200NAS)

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00LW9A328/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_gBj-ybGBQ50M6

I think with six cameras you are pushing the limits of 10/100.

u/Go3Team · 1 pointr/rva

I have 2 of these:

https://www.amazon.com/NETGEAR-Gigabit-Lifetime-Protection-GS110TPv2/dp/B00LW9A328

I use a fiber SFP to connect to the main switch.

What I need is a 96 port switch. I have too many things on the network here.

u/bitanalyst · 0 pointsr/homedefense

You might as well get a decent gigabit ethernet switch. Netgear makes a really nice managed POE switch for $150.

http://www.amazon.com/NETGEAR-ProSAFE-GS110TP-Gigabit-GS110TP-200NAS/dp/B00LW9A328

Pretty much any cat6 cable will do. If you have an rj45 crimping tool you can cut the cables to the exact length that you require and terminate the ends. Otherwise just buy preterminated cables.

http://www.amazon.com/Cable-Matters-Snagless-Ethernet-Patch/dp/B007NZHQDY