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15 votes
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Home network support: Setting up a network switch
I moved into a new apartment and was surprised to see that all my rooms have CAT 5 Ethernet ports in the wall. However, cue my disappoint when I try to naively plug my router and machine in two...
I moved into a new apartment and was surprised to see that all my rooms have CAT 5 Ethernet ports in the wall. However, cue my disappoint when I try to naively plug my router and machine in two separate ports to find that the ports don't actually work. After searching various forums, I found that I have to:
- Locate the panel where all the ethernet ports connect
- Wire them to an ethernet switch.
I found the panel but all the wires look like this:
https://i.imgur.com/Qzm72g0.jpg
I'm not sure what I need to do from here to plugging into my network switch. Any guides or advice would be extremely helpful. I don't need every port connected to the switch, only one or two. None of these look labelled so I might have a difficult time isolating which cable runs where.
And about the network switch... Any qualms about using an old router that has the AP turned off?
10 votes -
Inkscape 1.0 has been released - Free and open source vector graphics editor for GNU/Linux, Windows and MacOS X
21 votes -
Face ID doesn’t work when you’re wearing a mask—Apple’s about to address that
12 votes -
Polish sound postcards (pocztówka dźwiękowa)
9 votes -
Twitch steamer Dr Disrespect's shtick takes a dangerous turn into spreading coronavirus conspiracy theories
8 votes -
Love Bug's creator tracked down to repair shop in Manila
7 votes -
Why do I pay Adobe $10K a year? Reviewing video production software alternatives
14 votes -
How to use your DSLR or mirrorless camera as a webcam
8 votes -
The safety boat: Kubernetes and Rust
6 votes -
The Russian doll of Putin's internet clampdown
12 votes -
How I built a $100 drive-in movie theater to hang out with friends while social distancing
6 votes -
ICANN board withholds consent for a change of control of the Public Interest Registry (PIR) | The ICANN board withholds consent to transfer .org to Ethos Capital
27 votes -
Why is TV 29.97 frames per second?
10 votes -
Four essential Jenkins plugins
3 votes -
Exam anxiety: How remote test-proctoring is creeping students out
9 votes -
Reddit introduces new "Start Chatting" feature across many subreddits, AskHistorians goes dark for 1 hour in protest to broken promises
57 votes -
Intel's flagship 10th-gen desktop CPU—the Core i9-10900K—has 10 cores, reaches 5.3GHz
6 votes -
The real impact of an open redirect vulnerability
4 votes -
The anti-Amazon alliance
6 votes -
I sing the airplane electric—Until now, an airplane was never a cheap date
6 votes -
Apple COVID-19 mobility trends reports
6 votes -
This is a web page
37 votes -
Organizing and running a developer room at FOSDEM
3 votes -
Google Meet premium video meetings—free for everyone
6 votes -
Hyperdome - the safest place to reach out
5 votes -
Michael Reeves builds a surgery robot
19 votes -
Why the An-225 Mriya is such a badass plane
7 votes -
Oracle wins cloud computing deal with Zoom as video calls surge
8 votes -
Are we simple yet?
4 votes -
Best funny Zoom background trick: Put yourself in a looping video so you can skip the meeting
3 votes -
DJI’s new Mavic Air 2 has an upgraded camera and much longer flying time
3 votes -
Nearly two years after Europe's GDPR privacy law came into effect, supporters are frustrated by lack of enforcement, poor funding, limited staff resources and stalling tactics by the tech companies
10 votes -
Recommendation request: Modern wifi routers
I'm running out of time to finish the spend requirements on a credit card promotion. I was planning on buying a VR headset, but I realized there was something that would actually be much more...
I'm running out of time to finish the spend requirements on a credit card promotion. I was planning on buying a VR headset, but I realized there was something that would actually be much more useful; a new router.
The market for consumer routers has been really strange; We are on the sixth generation, yet it's super common for consumer routers to be two or three generations behind, especially the less expensive ones. So much of the stuff on the market only goes up to 802.11n, and half of the time the firmware they include is halfway broken or is missing important features.
So I'm looking for a router that is relatively future-proof. I want Wifi 6. I want something that won't be interrupted by the microwave. Open source firmware would be excellent, but not a requirement. I don't need mesh networking; my house is not that big. I do want it to be relatively inexpensive; I'd consider $300 to be a hard limit unless someone has a persuasive arguement to justify the cost.
I would also prefer to avoid Netgear. I have no idea how they stay in business with the mountains of problems I have had with their products and their horrible support. The last time I owned a Netgear product, I was forced to give them my email address to download the driver and they illegally added it to their marketing mailing list without my permission. I don't do business with people who betray me.
18 votes -
iPhone SE (2020) review
22 votes -
UNESCO suggests COVID-19 is a reason to create... eternal copyright
10 votes -
A history of vintage electronics: The Guglielmo Marconi Collection and the history of wireless communications
3 votes -
In the debate over freedom versus control of the global network, China was largely correct, and the US was wrong
6 votes -
Air Greenland’s record-breaking eight hour turboprop flight
10 votes -
Xerox PARC Winnebiko presentation by Steve Roberts - 1989
6 votes -
Google to require all advertisers to pass identity verification process
12 votes -
RTX Voice - NVIDIA apparently actually made a neural network audio filter that works very well
8 votes -
Facebook approved ads with coronavirus misinformation, in an experiment which raises questions about how the social media giant screens ads on its platform
8 votes -
Recommend me a new phone
Hi all -- I have had a Moto G5+ for the last two years, and have been largely happy with it. However, it's recently developed some serious issues w/ charging -- it tends to not ever get past ~45%,...
Hi all -- I have had a Moto G5+ for the last two years, and have been largely happy with it. However, it's recently developed some serious issues w/ charging -- it tends to not ever get past ~45%, and the battery indicator seems to be ... disconnected from how long the phone actually lasts. I have attempted cleaning out the charging port (there was a lot of caked-in dust), changing the charging cable and port, to no avail. It works ok-ish for the moment, but I have largely been limiting it to emergency usage and I suspect it's on it's way out.
So, I find myself in the market for a new phone. In the past I have typically gone with whatever the cheapest reasonable Android phone has been (hence, the G5+ which I really do like quite a bit besides the poor camera). I am not a heavy phone user, and I really don't care about having the latest and greatest, my priorities are:
- long battery life (my Moto G5 lasts two days fully charged)
- cheap (say 200-300$, the SE on this thread is probably the upper bound of what I'd want to spend)
- reasonably performant
- preferably reasonable privacy protections (probably a pipe-dream)
The Moto G series have checked all boxes (apart from privacy) in the past, but I am considering whether I can take this opportunity to rid myself of another Google device in my life. I was thinking potentially going for a refurbished iPhone, but I really have no idea what to be looking for there. I haven't used an Apple device since my iPod (iTunes on Windows PTSD is real, and I don't even want to think about Linux support), and I am more than a bit hesitant to tie myself into their ecosystem, but it's hard to deny their superiority from a privacy standpoint.
I had also considered a Librem 5 at one point, and would be willing to spend a bit more for something so privacy oriented. But the 6-month order window, and other things I read about Purisms' roll-out have left me a bit wary there.
Any thoughts?
Thanks!
12 votes -
Proton has brought about 6000 games to Linux so far
13 votes -
Magic Leap cuts half of jobs (about 1000) in major restructuring, plans to focus on enterprise business instead of consumer
7 votes -
Facebook invests $5.7 billion in India's Jio Platforms, becoming the largest minority shareholder in the telecommunications company
7 votes -
John Gruber reviews the iPad Magic Keyboard
5 votes -
US unemployment checks are being held up by a coding language almost nobody knows
21 votes -
It's time to build
5 votes