this post was submitted on 28 Nov 2023
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Home Networking
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The splitter you linked says that the connections can be used simultaneously. Is it any different than a switch?
I use actual switches but am curious of the difference with this product
It can work simultaneously, by limiting the link speed to 100 mbps each (2 pairs each port). It literally "splits" the RJ45 input into 2 pairs to power both ports. So if you are good with 100 mbps link speeds for 2 devices (i.e., a smart TV that usually has a 100 mbps NIC and an old Apple TV HD which also has a 100 mbps NIC), then you can buy/use this product.
Nah look closer - its a switch. USB power supply and normal switch LED indicators on the ports.
Idk why they are marketing it as a "splitter" making it sound inferior...that should make for more painful searches next time I need an actual splitter. Which can be handy for like 2x PoE cameras over 1 existing drop...and even 4K cameras will never saturate 100Mbps so its fine.
On amazon even normal switches have that term "splitter" in the description.
Even the TP-link switch that /u/1sh0t1b33r posted.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00A128S24
They include it because its a term many naive users search for.
Search engine "optimization"