this post was submitted on 23 May 2025
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[–] Mio@feddit.nu 4 points 2 weeks ago (9 children)

I am just wondering if it would be better to go straight to fiber instead of ethernet as most have fiber to the home anyway. That should help with future speed upgrades beyond 10Gbit as well.

Fiber is also more power efficient? Why not?

[–] Valmond@lemmy.world 3 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

You need more than10Gb/s at home? I mean we all know the 640Kb meme but I'm curious here :-)

[–] Korhaka@sopuli.xyz 4 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

I frequently transfer data over the LAN at a higher rate than my internet connection.

Kinda wish it was easier to test the connection speed between devices tbh, unless someone knows a good way of doing it but many devices are so locked down I am not sure how you would.

[–] hornedfiend@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 week ago (7 children)

Even when doing that, the bottleneck is the storage write speed. you can have 1Tb internet connection and it wouldn’t matter unless you have enough users in a home.

[–] patatahooligan@lemmy.world 2 points 1 week ago (2 children)

NVMEs are claiming sequential write speeds of several GBps (capital B as in byte). The article talks about 10Gbps (lowercase b as in bits), so 1.25GBps. Even with raw storage writes the NVME might not be the bottleneck in this scenario.

And then there's the fact that disk writes are buffered in RAM. These motherboards are not available yet so we're talking about future PC builds. It is safe to say that many of them will be used in systems with 32GB RAM. If you're idling/doing light activity while waiting for a download to finish you'll have most of your RAM free and you would be able to get 25-30GB before storage speed becomes a factor.

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