I do see 2.5 GbE NICs really making huge headway just within the past few years alone. Even lower end AMD and Intel motherboards are including 2.5 GbE ethernet ports by default these days, and that standard has the advantage of using the same copper RJ45 cabling, while giving you a theoretical 2.5x gain in speeds. For many users, even including myself, 2.5 GbE is a fantastic leap forward without having to dump money into fancier gear in order to properly take advantage of something faster like 10 GbE networking.
i think the main reason is that 99% of users, even most businesses, dont require more than 1Gb... Yea, if you are moving massive amounts of data around, 10Gb is handy, but 99 times out of 10, 1Gb will do. And its a chicken/egg situation. Since most people don't necessarily need it, manufactures wont make them in bulk... With the advent of larger games and faster consoles, maybe going to 10Gb will happen soon...
STH gives good overviews, did nothing wrong there.
But I wonder about awareness of https://fs.com or in this case specifically https://www.fs.com/eu-en/c/10-25-40-100g-modules-1113 and the fitting 'cables' or rather prefabricated/assembled fibre-assemblies? Like https://www.fs.com/eu-en/c/1-10-25g-sfp-sfp-sfp28-2869 ?
It's weird to me that we have had cheap and power-efficient gigabit ethernet for almost 20 years and 10 GbE is still not there.
In the 90s/00 we progressed from 10 Mbit/s to 100 Mbit/s and then to 1 Gbit/s in like 5-6 years per step.
I do see 2.5 GbE NICs really making huge headway just within the past few years alone. Even lower end AMD and Intel motherboards are including 2.5 GbE ethernet ports by default these days, and that standard has the advantage of using the same copper RJ45 cabling, while giving you a theoretical 2.5x gain in speeds. For many users, even including myself, 2.5 GbE is a fantastic leap forward without having to dump money into fancier gear in order to properly take advantage of something faster like 10 GbE networking.
i think the main reason is that 99% of users, even most businesses, dont require more than 1Gb... Yea, if you are moving massive amounts of data around, 10Gb is handy, but 99 times out of 10, 1Gb will do. And its a chicken/egg situation. Since most people don't necessarily need it, manufactures wont make them in bulk... With the advent of larger games and faster consoles, maybe going to 10Gb will happen soon...
Maybe consumer NAS devices drove mass 1Gb adoption?
Mechanical hard drives are still kind of slow and SSD/NVMe/PCIe-based NAS devices are just getting started.