Home News Forum Articles
  Welcome back Join CF
You are here You are here: Home | Forum | Building a network in a small office.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most of the discussions, articles and other free features. By joining our Virgin Media community you will have full access to all discussions, be able to view and post threads, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own images/photos, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please join our community today.


Welcome to Cable Forum
Go Back   Cable Forum > Computers & IT > Networking
Register FAQ Community Calendar

Building a network in a small office.
Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 31-03-2005, 23:27   #16
SMHarman
Inactive
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Services: Cablevision
Posts: 8,305
SMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronze
SMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronzeSMHarman is cast in bronze
Re: Building a network in a small office.

Thanks for all the advise guys - I think I will run two (or three in some cases) cables to each room, then if the need for more devices arises I can add cable (if easy) or hubs if not. Initially there will only be two - three people in the office so this should be adequate. This much cable will all hapily fit into a SOHO 8 port router for now and this will support file and printer sharing happily, when the SBS server goes in then I can set that up for DCHP etc.
At least I know how much cable to buy now.
SMHarman is offline   Reply With Quote
Advertisement
Old 01-04-2005, 01:30   #17
poolking
Inactive
 
Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Stafford
Age: 50
Services: Sky World 300k BB NTL Phone
Posts: 2,399
poolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant futurepoolking has a brilliant future
Send a message via AIM to poolking Send a message via MSN to poolking Send a message via Yahoo to poolking
Re: Building a network in a small office.

Remember there are 2 types of cat 5 cable, solid for flood wiring, i.e. the wiring from the rj45 wall ports to the patch panels and stranded for patch cables.
poolking is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2005, 22:28   #18
Matth
Inactive
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Services: BB:M, TV:XL, Phone:M, Loyalty
Posts: 2,516
Matth has reached the bronze age
Matth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze ageMatth has reached the bronze age
Re: Building a network in a small office.

Remember, either mark the ends of the cables, or apply a short to the end of one and then probe for it with a meter at the other end - THEN MARK.

If your running the cables, run some extras, and then if not all circuits will be "live", then it is essential to know which is which.

The larger the main switch is, the better, and you could split servers (print/file etc.) to benefit from traffic isolation in the switch.

PS. April the 4th (it MAY be a hoax, as I saw the news on April 1st) - Dell are reported to be offering a reasonably capable base unit ... e-code 305-PE0410 for £99 ... if true, probably good for office servers and office PC's - better still if you wanted a Linux office, as that price is without OS.
Matth is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 04-04-2005, 11:52   #19
zovat
Inactive
 
zovat's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Bracknell
Age: 54
Services: NTL Telephone 3M Broadband - CM Sky TV
Posts: 1,246
zovat has reached the bronze age
zovat has reached the bronze agezovat has reached the bronze agezovat has reached the bronze agezovat has reached the bronze agezovat has reached the bronze agezovat has reached the bronze agezovat has reached the bronze agezovat has reached the bronze age
Send a message via MSN to zovat
Re: Building a network in a small office.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Matth
PS. April the 4th (it MAY be a hoax, as I saw the news on April 1st) - Dell are reported to be offering a reasonably capable base unit ... e-code 305-PE0410 for £99 ... if true, probably good for office servers and office PC's - better still if you wanted a Linux office, as that price is without OS.
It is true - just had tyhe Email from Dell, telling me it is available for today....
Celeron Proc, 80Gb Sata drive, CD-Rom and 256Mb memory..
zovat is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply


Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests)
 

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:09.


Server: osmium.zmnt.uk
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.