Uh, then why are you buying them in the stores? Just order them online. What, you can't wait a few days?
Uh, then why are you buying them in the stores? Just order them online. What, you can't wait a few days?
First of all that was just an observation. Regardless, sometimes I have the time and sometimes I don't. I don't suppose you have ever been on travel in a situation where you need to give a presentation and need to get a cable in a hurry.
Good story!
I would point out that this holds true for basically all computer cables, too. A USB cable is a USB cable. A CAT5 Ethernet cable is a CAT5 Ethernet cable. Those expensive cables are just how stores rip off people who don't know any better.
Good story!
I would point out that this holds true for basically all computer cables, too. A USB cable is a USB cable. A CAT5 Ethernet cable is a CAT5 Ethernet cable. Those expensive cables are just how stores rip off people who don't know any better.
Ehh...not entirely true. At long distances you are going to get differences based on the quality of your Ethernet cable, dependent on shielding and the twist. Though, we're talking about hundreds to a couple thousand feet or more before packet loss is noticeable (1% or more), so for people wiring up a home LAN it's not a problem.
That's just my work at AT&T talking. MaBell sure as hell doesn't spend $30 per 10 foot stretch, and NOTHING is gold-plated. Personally, I usually buy Cat6, just to be sure it will at least be Cat5/Cat5e quality, plus it won't hurt once fiber-to-the-home becomes common and you have a use for 10 gigabit-class wiring. It's only an extra $10 (vs Cat5e) for a thousand feet of the stuff, why not splurge?
Good story!
I would point out that this holds true for basically all computer cables, too. A USB cable is a USB cable. A CAT5 Ethernet cable is a CAT5 Ethernet cable. Those expensive cables are just how stores rip off people who don't know any better.
Ehh...not entirely true. At long distances you are going to get differences based on the quality of your Ethernet cable, dependent on shielding and the twist. Though, we're talking about hundreds to a couple thousand feet or more before packet loss is noticeable (1% or more), so for people wiring up a home LAN it's not a problem.
That's just my work at AT&T talking. MaBell sure as hell doesn't spend $30 per 10 foot stretch, and NOTHING is gold-plated. Personally, I usually buy Cat6, just to be sure it will at least be Cat5/Cat5e quality, plus it won't hurt once fiber-to-the-home becomes common and you have a use for 10 gigabit-class wiring. It's only an extra $10 (vs Cat5e) for a thousand feet of the stuff, why not splurge?
Yeah, but don't the standards usually forbid overly long cables? Meaning you aren't likely to be able to buy them in a store or whatever. I believe the USB standard doesn't allow cables longer than 6 feet, for instance.
Anyway, I was talking more apples and apples. Is it common to get Cat6 and have it only be reliable for Cat5-level service?
Yeah, but don't the standards usually forbid overly long cables? Meaning you aren't likely to be able to buy them in a store or whatever. I believe the USB standard doesn't allow cables longer than 6 feet, for instance.
Anyway, I was talking more apples and apples. Is it common to get Cat6 and have it only be reliable for Cat5-level service?
Are there HDMI cables that are easier to route around corners? Most of the ones I've seen have very large connectors that leave very *little* room in the back of something. Do they have ones that have like an L-shape on the end?
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