OP
Owen Smith
Well-Known Member
All the ethernet at my house is gigabit, except on links to things like HDR Fox T2 that support 100mbit max. I have 300mbit down / 50 mbit up broadband so I do get throughput greater than 100mbit on some operations, typically firmware updates of various things.I've never used gigabit Ethernet.
All the cabling in the walls and under the floor at my parents house is CAT 6 and within the length limit to be good for up to 10 gigabit, though they only have 100mbit on their router.
Absolutely, always has been. There is also now auto detection of which way round the pairs are so there is no longer any need for cross over cables, I remember needing those unless the hub or switch had a port labelled "uplink" sometimes with a switched for whether it was in crossover mode.Question: Is there some kind of auto-detection which falls back to 10/100 (ie two pairs) if 1000 (four pairs) isn't working?