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    The Computer Audiophile

    Stability and Performance from Access Networks

    It should come as no surprise to anyone reading Computer Audiophile that home networks are very important and seem to be increasing in importance year over year. I use the adjective "important" because home networks have moved far beyond the ISP supplied modem / wireless router all-in-one device that enabled Mom to hear "You've got mail" back in 1999. Many of us use our networks for audio of course, but also for controlling the temperature in our homes, sending data from multiple security cameras to the cloud, streaming 4k UHD HDR content from Netflix, low latency gaming, and Wi-Fi calling built into iPhones or Android devices, among many other things. Multiply this usage by any factor necessary when a home has multiple residents.

     

    Home networks are far from our pristine audio-only environments. Many of us use computers designed only for audio with nothing extraneous installed. We have NAS drives with nothing but music on them and we know the only activity on the drives involves sending music to our audio devices. On the analog side, nothing traverses an interconnect or speaker cable unless we press play. Networks are a different animal entirely. They are constantly sending traffic to communicate, no matter if someone is streaming from Tidal or sleeping or three thousand miles from home. That said, networks aren't rocket science, but they can require a special skillset to design if one's requirements are above and beyond Joe Sixpack.


     

    Audiophiles and Music Lovers

     

    Many people who enjoy the finer things in life, such as a high end audio system, settle for the lowest common denominator when it comes to a home network. I can't even count the number of times I've talked to people with network problems who are using the all-in-one device supplied by an Internet Service Provider (ISP) or people who have turned into the family IT expert to design an "enterprise" class network for home. This is so common that almost all HiFi companies I've talked to about network based products say the same thing with respect to supporting customers with problems, "it's a customer network issue 99.999% of the time." Companies such as Meridian / Sooloos, Aurender, Naim, Auralic, Linn, dCS, Roon, etc... all say the same thing, and they aren't trying to pass the buck. It's in their best interests to help a customer, even though they often wind up solving issues totally unrelated to their products.

     

    I'm all for starting with inexpensive components and trying to do things yourself, and learning a little in the process. But, when problems start appearing, it's time to call the experts. The experts in this case are from Access Networks. This southern California company was founded in 2003. Today it works with hundreds of integrators / dealers around the country to design solutions that balance ease of use and robustness. Sure, a company with enterprise IT experience could install a business network in one's home. After all, data is data as long as it gets from point A to point B. The problem with such a network is that it may require a computer science degree to understand it and make a minor adjustment. In addition, products designed for 500 person office with elevator columns and cement floors, may not be the best fit in a home.

     

    Before continuing, I want to provide readers with a small bit of information about myself, to help in understanding my point of view with respect to networks and networking. This article isn't about me, but more information may be beneficial. I worked in enterprise IT for a decade after college, for fortune 500 companies. I designed, installed, configured, managed, and maintained local and global networks. This includes switches, routers, firewalls, access points, and synchronizing storage data around the world in case a disaster wiped out a datacenter. That said, the Computer Audiophile Community is full of people much smarter and more experienced that I when it comes to networking. No matter the topic, there's always someone stronger, faster, or smarter whenever the audience is global.


     

    The Beginning

     

    Access Networks works through custom integrators and dealers around the country. The company doesn't interface directly with consumers, but it will happily field inquiries and connect consumers with the best local resource for their needs.

     

    I went through the process of obtaining a network from 'Access' directly, so I could evaluate the company in addition to the product it would have delivered to me if I'd have gone through a local dealer. Other than this direct communication, there shouldn't be many differences for consumers working through a local dealer.

     

    The process started with a phone call and simple questionnaire. Access Networks needed to know more about my expectations and requirements. If I'd have said I expect the network to work 50% of the time and I only have a single computer that sends email, the recommended solution would've been much different from the one I eventually installed. Any company suggesting it knows what to install, without a consultation with the homeowner, isn't a company I want in my house.

     

    The questions asked of me and the questionnaire were very straight forward and assumed I was an average user. The 'Access' team knew what to ask, even when I couldn't think of something during the discussion. This is important because we've all interfaced with the IT guy who asks the user for requirements and installs a system based on the user's answers. However, this guy doesn't ask the right questions to extract all the required information. It's impossible to expect the consumer to raise all the pertinent issues and requirements, when he or she doesn't have the IT background.

     

    Access Networks asked how many square feet were in my house, how many floors the house has, and what materials the house was made of, such as wood, plaster, metal, sheetrock, etc... Pretty easy questions to answer for even the novice. Access also asked about the number and type of devices on my network, what the devices were used for,  if I had any existing Ethernet cabling in the walls, and if I needed wireless coverage inside and outside my house.

     

    Once this discussion was complete, Access sent a document for me to complete. The document asked for existing wireless network names (SSID Name), security type (WPA, WPA2, WEP, etc...), VPN information if necessary, and passwords for these networks. I'll skip ahead a bit just to note that Access used this information when creating the new network for my house. Upon installation, all my devices connected to the wireless network without any reconfiguration. This may not be a big deal for some, but it's a pain in the neck to reconfigure a thermostat, a bathroom scale, a doorbell, and friend's phones (when they visit the house again), Internet of Things (IoT) devices don't always have simple interfaces for changing network information. For example, changing the network or password on our bathroom scale is an absolute joke. I tried it once and gave up. Thus, I have an old AirPort express using an old SSID solely to service the bathroom scale (before the 'Access' network was installed).



     

    Access Networks

     

    (click to enlarge)

     

     

     

     

     

     

    My Requirements From An Audio Perspective

     

    In addition to way too many gadgets and video streaming devices on my network, I have the devices that I care about most in my listening room and wireless audio devices around the house. At any given time I have roughly 25 audio devices on the network. There is a mix of wireless and wired devices. Devices such as a dCS Rossini DAC, Auralic Aries, Aries Mini, and Altair, Sonore microRendu, SOtM sMS-200, Aurender W20, A10, N10, Chromecast Audio, Klipsch The Three, Naim Mu-so, Synology NAS units, and CAPS Cortes server to name a few.

     

    My audio devices have different requirements as well, such as UPnP, DLNA, RoonReady, DTS Play-Fi, Wi-Fi, 2.4GHz, 5.8GHz, 802.11a/b/g/n/ac, PCM, DSD, 24 bit / 384 kHz, DSD256, etc...  In addition to different requirements, some are designed better than others. Some devices work great with any UPnP server while others can't handle too much data at once, and a host of other strange occurrences. When strange things happen during audio playback, the first item everyone points to as the likely cause, it the network. During the period I had this 'Access' designed network in my house, I felt at ease when I told manufacturers that the issue-of-the-day wasn't with my network because it's from Access Networks. Only one person questioned this and suggested that we should still consider the network as the source of the problem. Upon further investigation by this very bright person, his conclusion was that the network was too fast for some ARM based devices to handle the audio packets without dropping them. In other words, the network was too good and required adjustments by the developers of applications to account for this "issue."



     

    The Recommendation

     

    Based on my requirements, Access Networks recommended a network package for my house. This package was called The Foundation C with some small customization.

     

    The hardware consisted of a combination of wired and wireless gear.

     

    Wired:

    Cisco Catalyst 2960-X Series 24 Port Switch (This switch was placed in my utility room where I had the most devices).

    Cisco Catalyst 2960-CX Series 8 Port Switch with PoE (This switch was placed in my utility room and used to power the wireless access points).

    Cisco Catalyst 2960-CX Series 8 Port Switch (This switch was placed just outside of my listening room and was used for all my wired HiFi gear).

    Cisco ASA 5506-X Router / Firewall

     

    Wireless:

    Ruckus Wireless ZoneDirector ZD1200 (this is a wired piece of hardware used to manage the wireless access points and optimize the wireless environment).

    Ruckus Wireless Access Point R600 (three of these, one for each floor of my house).

     

    The total cost of the system is $13,299.

     

    I accepted the system as proposed. Once everything arrived from Access Networks, I unboxed the hardware in addition to a network diagram and documentation. Consumers don't usually install these systems on their own, because the integrator / dealer is there to do the work. In my case, I had no issues connecting the wires exactly how they were laid out in the network diagram. I think a monkey could have followed each line and connected point A to point B.




     

    The Assessment

     

    Once the Access Networks design system was in place and I'd verified it was working, I started digging through my notes looking for usernames and passwords for each of the hardware devices. That's what people who are into this stuff do, we look at all the settings to see if anything "needs" to be changed. We are also accustomed to consumer network equipment that never arrives optimized for one's specific requirements. I also thought I'd poke around a bit to get a feel for the gear, especially the Ruckus Wireless components. I hadn't used Ruckus gear before this stuff arrived, and I was curious. Plus, wireless networks always need adjustments, firmware updates, reboots, and miscellaneous tinkering to why "YouTube isn't working on the Roku."

     

    After a few minutes I was distracted from the username and password search. I made a note to follow up with Access Networks. Surprisingly, I never followed up. I kept telling myself I should call them to get the information, but after several weeks I changed my mind. I thought, the person who wants this type of network and who can't design it themselves, really doesn't want the usernames and passwords to the equipment. If a username and password are required by the consumer, the installation is a failure. Why would I need a username and password if everything is working? Shouldn't the pre-design consultation make these credentials unnecessary?

     

    As it turns out, yes, these credentials are unnecessary when Access Networks is involved. I've been using this network for 11 months and I've yet to need the username and password for anything. In fact, I haven't rebooted a single piece of hardware since the installation. Think about that, I'm a network guy and I had no need to gain access to my home network for the last 11 months. After a few months I even lost the desire to get into the equipment. Why mess with something that works? To make it better? Perhaps, but given this network's performance I don't believe better is possible.

     

    I could have run several network stress tests before and after the Access Networks system was installed, but that's a red herring in my opinion. If I was a network stress tester for a living, such tests would be interesting to me. However, this network was designed to handle everything for which I use the system. I'm sure it would have performed awesome in such tests, but I'd rather test it using everyday activities.

     

    Over the course of the next 11 months, I used the network to the best of my ability. A menagerie of IoT devices, phones, tablets, laptops, audio and video gear, wired and wireless, etc... Nothing phased this Access Networks designed system.

     

    I connected multiple wired and wireless audio endpoints and Netflix 4K streaming devices, and simultaneously sent content to them all. This meant highly compressed Netflix content, but I have no control over that. The audio I sent was three streams of DSD256 over Wi-Fi and two streams of 24/352.8 PCM over wired Ethernet. All at the same time. Plus, while I was conducting this multi-zone audio experiment, the rest of my family was surfing the internet and emailing, without a clue that such business was going on downstairs. After trying to break the network in every normal fashion, I failed to cause a single audio dropout. Everything worked perfect.

     

    In addition to playing audio and video, I frequently copy/move several terabytes of data around my network while testing different NAS units and computers. With the Access Networks system in place, my network speed was frequently around 800 Mbps if my memory serves me correctly. Sure there's 200 additional Mbps to be had, but there are other limitations such as overhead, read/write speed, NIC, and HDD/SSD that may prohibit faster data movement.


     

    The Comparison

     

    Given that my previous network was Cisco based, it's hard to really provide a usable comparison. I have no interest in comparing my network design versus Access' network design. That wouldn't help anyone. Also, anyone that can design and configure a Cisco based network, probably won't be interested in Access Networks' services anyway.

     

    It makes a bit more sense to discuss how the Access Networks network compares to pedestrian networks available at and designed by the local Best Buy salesman. I've had various Netgear, TP-Link, DLink, and Apple devices in here over the years. For the most par they all work pretty well. Updating them and rebooting them consistently really improves reliability and was a requirement for some hardware.

     

    Throughput, wired network performance, and wireless network reliability are all up in the air with these store bought networks. With support that can be difficult to use on a good day and zero network design that has considered one's specific home environment, an off-the-shelf system from the local Microcenter may work great, until it doesn't.

     

    One example of an off-the-shelf issue I had last year involves a wireless router from Netgear. I researched which router to purchase for days. I looked at all the online tests before settling on a specific model. I Amazon Primed it and had it running in no time. However, I was only getting 150 Mbps download / upload speeds when running the Ookla speed tests. Given that I have 1 Gbps up/down and I had previously tested the speed at around 950 Mbps, this was an issue. The Netgear router had a Gb network port on the WAN in addition to a few Gb ports on the LAN. After more research I found out I had to install hacked firmware on the Netgear router to reach speeds of around 700 Mbps. All around a bad situation. Most people purchasing this router would never get to the workaround that still didn't give me Gbps speed. They would continue paying for Gbps speed but only get 150 Mbps. Maybe they'd call the ISP and talk to someone on the support line about the issue. I can see it now, "It's your network" "No it's your network." Good luck with that one.

     

    Note: If issues arise with an Access Networks designed system, the company has support staff that can remote connect and remote diagnose many problems. Try that with any of the aforementioned companies.



     

    Wrap-up

     

    My time with the network designed by Access Networks has been so refreshing. I'm used to messing with all network equipment that enters my house, and all my relatives' houses for that matter. This network was different in many ways, chief among them was its stability. I didn't even have the login credentials to gain access to the network, but I didn't need them during the entire 11 months of using the system.

     

    The network performance, both wired and wireless, has never been better in my house. Now it's time to ship the system back to Access Networks. There's no way I'm shipping this system before I leave for the Munich High End trade show next week. I need a rock solid network running at home, while I'm away on business. Doing tech support for my family from 4,500 miles and 7 times zones away, because I voluntarily removed a perfectly good network, just doesn't excite me. Keeping the Access Networks system in place, so I can enjoy the Super Bowl of audio shows in Germany, now that excites me.

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    System Details:

     

    • ASA5506-K9 - Cisco ASA 5506-X Adaptive Security Appliance - Multi-WAN Capable.
    • 901-1205-US00 - Ruckus ZoneDirector 1200 wireless LAN controller, licensed for up to 5 Access Points.
    • 901-R600-US00 - ZoneFlex R600 dual-band 802.11abgn/ac 2x2:2 streams Wireless Access Point.
    • C2960CX-8PC-L - Cisco Catalyst 8-port Gigabit PoE+ Ethernet switch with 2x 1G SFP and 2x 1G copper PoE+ uplinks. 1U
    • C2960X-24TS-LL - Cisco Catalyst 24-port Gigabit Ethernet switch with two SFP uplinks. 1U
    • C2960CG-8TC-L - Cisco Catalyst 8-port Gigabit Ethernet switch with two dual-purpose gigabit uplinks. 1U

     

     

    Additional Information:

     

    Access Networks: website, contact, rep locator

     

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    24 minutes ago, Johnseye said:

     I understand the buffer should help, but does it eliminate all timing issues?  Is there something we're missing?

     

    Yes and No respectively.

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    3 minutes ago, plissken said:

     

    Just because someone makes stuff up doesn't mean it's true. In another thread I posted ADC'd tracks of a $233 per foot Ethernet cable and a $0.30 foot cable. The $233 was only 3 foot and the $0.30 was 315 foot that I chucked underneath a microwave and had it running while I captured a track on it.

     

    I posted with what track was what cable. Initially STC thought the $700 cable sounded better. When he had the tracks randomized and put through Foobar's ABX comparison function he said he didn't hit 7 out of 10 correct.

     

    Again, what does even an more 25MHz clock have to do with playback if you can destroy the clock with jitter? That is cause a huge amount of jitter by removing the cable.

     

    I don't care what people are saying about clocks on switches and NIC's because they are delusional. Same as I don't care what people say about Ethernet cabling that cost from $30 to $200 plus a foot. Subjective evaluation is valueless in this regard.

     

    All I know is that I can add these people the list of opinions on anything audible that I can safely throw out because they are making stuff up.

     

    I think you still need to counter with your own data specific to the test.  I understand you conducted one for the ethernet cable, and I listened to the test myself, but A, that's cable and not clocks and B. that was 2 cables.  Based on that test I know enough not to buy the Wireworld ethernet.  My point is that it's limited.  I don't disagree with your logic, but a counter argument must have its own foundation and validation.  Until then it's only hypothetical.

     

    Just now, plissken said:

     

    Yes and No respectively.

     

    A buffer can under and overflow so I respectfully disagree, but prove me wrong with solid fact.  Maybe start a new post outside of this review as it could get involved.  I'd really like to think that the buffer is a cure all and that makes all clocks equal, but I have my doubts.  So I'm learning as much as I can and keeping an open mind.

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    aurcA

    Quote

     

     

    A buffer can under and overflow so I respectfully disagree, but prove me wrong with solid fact.  Maybe start a new post outside of this review as it could get involved.  I'd really like to think that the buffer is a cure all and that makes all clocks equal, but I have my doubts.  So I'm learning as much as I can and keeping an open mind.

     

    It's going to be much simpler than putting together a switch and card with updated clock.

     

    I can capture some tracks and pull the plug while playing back. All anyone needs to do is figure when the clocking disappeared.

     

    AGAIN what does the clock on the Ethernet subsystem have to do with audio quality if I can pull the plug and the music still plays? Why is it that I can never seem to get an answer for this to date?

     

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    18 minutes ago, Johnseye said:

    A buffer can under and overflow so I respectfully disagree, but prove me wrong with solid fact.  Maybe start a new post outside of this review as it could get involved.  I'd really like to think that the buffer is a cure all and that makes all clocks equal, but I have my doubts.  So I'm learning as much as I can and keeping an open mind.

     

    They can but when is the last time you had your audio drop out.

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    52 minutes ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    Hi Guys - Please move the Ethernet clocking discussion to a separate thread. 

     

    52 minutes ago, Jud said:

    Deleted.

     

    Chris, while the details or debate belong elsewhere my question to you is whether, other than reliability, did you experience any benefits, especially sound quality gains from this equipment? 

     

    Jud, you had a good response. 8 understand why but it's too bad you deleted it. 

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    1 minute ago, Johnseye said:

     

     

    Chris, while the details or debate belong elsewhere my question to you is whether, other than reliability, did you experience any benefits, especially sound quality gains from this equipment? 

     

    Jud, you had a good response. 8 understand why but it's too bad you deleted it. 

     

    I'm sure there'll be plenty of time in other discussions.  :)

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    9 minutes ago, Johnseye said:

    Chris, while the details or debate belong elsewhere my question to you is whether, other than reliability, did you experience any benefits, especially sound quality gains from this equipment? 

     

    I heard nothing different between this and a $100 network. By nothing different, I mean there was no difference in soundstage, bass, treble, etc... what most people would discuss when talking about sound quality. I've never heard a difference between routers, switches, or NICs. I don't see how a difference could exist, but I don't discount the experience of others. 

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    28 minutes ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

     

    I heard nothing different between this and a $100 network. By nothing different, I mean there was no difference in soundstage, bass, treble, etc... what most people would discuss when talking about sound quality. I've never heard a difference between routers, switches, or NICs. I don't see how a difference could exist, but I don't discount the experience of others. 

     

    Based on my experience and knowledge I don't see how a difference could exist either.  When I see people sharing their experiences in these forums, as subjective as they are, my passion for IT and audio start driving me to learn more.  Thanks for sharing your experience.

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    2 hours ago, sdolezalek said:

    Poaching is something worth checking on.  I used to have a non passworded WiFi access point in our guest bedroom that was separated from the rest of the password protected network, but I didn't think about the fact that it could still soak up bandwidth at the router end until i discovered that half a dozen of my neighbors were connected through the guest WiFi and straming movies through it (presumably their kids).  Once i killed that my connection speeds went up dramatically. :) 

     

    I actually ran an open de-rated guest network for a long time and I never noticed any poaching (Wifi signal is basically non-existent once you step off our property).  I'm not too concerned about my WPA2-protected networks, but the Nighthawk's WebUI makes it easy to check if something seems amiss.

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    Speaking of open networks, I recently added a Samsung 4G LTE Network Extender to my house. It routes communication over my regular network and internet. This device is open to all Verizon users within its range. There is no way to lock it down. I can't wait until someone does something illegal through it and I get the letter in the mail to appear in court. Yes, it's my IP address, but but but ... as I'm hauled off in handcuffs :~)

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    Chris, great article.  In the novel 1984, Big Brother forced

    citizens to live in a connected dwelling.  In 2017, citizens are inviting audio and video surveillance into their homes.  The mind boggles.

     

    Most participating in this discussion will have strong passwords and, hopefully, other security features activated.   

     

    I, for one, will never have a connected bathroom scale, you never know who will hack your scale!

     

     

     

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    10 hours ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

    Speaking of open networks, I recently added a Samsung 4G LTE Network Extender to my house. It routes communication over my regular network and internet. This device is open to all Verizon users within its range. There is no way to lock it down. I can't wait until someone does something illegal through it and I get the letter in the mail to appear in court. Yes, it's my IP address, but but but ... as I'm hauled off in handcuffs :~)

    Interesting. I thought about adding one of those (we use AT&T), but the reason we have cellular reception problems is that there is a lot of steel in the framing of the house, so it acts as a Faraday cage, which tends to keep signals out, but I was worried that putting an extender "in the cage" would effectively turn the entire house into a microwave oven...  As to the WiFi, I assumed that our signal wouldn't travel across more than an acre of open space; it turned out that many of the illicit users were as far as several acres away.  I'm surprized Verizon won't let you password protect access, particularly as you are effectively giving Verizon users access to your broadband Internet connection for their 4G LTE browsing habits. 

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    “I'm all for starting with inexpensive components and trying to do things yourself, and learning a little in the process. But, when problems start appearing, it's time to call the experts.”

    Since the author seems to have called a CISCO salesman may I suggest he should also have a word with someone else in IT before signing the contract: the Enterprise Architect. I’ll do my best to fill that role.

    Here are a few dirty, little ‘secrets’ about enterprise IT.

    1.       The reason enterprise prices are 10 times more expensive than consumer equipment is because vendors can get away with charging 10 times more to businesses for items that only cost twice as much to manufacture. They prey on managers fears of not looking professional, not buying reputable brands and the lost revenue/reputation from system failures which impact customers. As the saying went “No one got fired for buying IBM”.

    2.       The paradigm for avoiding failures has been known for many years … but is often poorly implemented, if at all, even in enterprises! Consider for example the idea of RAID in handling disk failures. One of the simplest RAID levels is RAID 1, where two identical disks run in parallel and contain the same data, so when one fails the other continues and there is no data loss or system downtime. The principle here is “no single point of failure” or SPOF.

    3.       What does that 'I' in RAID stand for? INEXPENSIVE. At the time (late 80’s) the cost of larger and larger disks was skyrocketing, so instead of buying a very expensive large disk … hook up 2, 3, 4 …  smaller disks to reach the desired capacity.

    4.       Roughly speaking an enterprise grade disk might be guaranteed to last 5 years but equally likely to fail on any of those 5x365 days, so a 1 in 1825 of failing on a specific day. A consumer grade disk might only be guaranteed for 3 years, so 1 in 1095. If the chances of disk failure are taken as independent (disks bought from different manufacturers at different times) then the chance of two consumer disks failing ON THE SAME DAY is 1 in 1095 squared, pretty close to 1 in a million!

    5.       Note too that with duplicated components on stand-by one may have twice the bandwidth e.g. reading data from a RAID 1 array can be done through both disks in parallel.

    6.       Enterprise vendors deliberately withhold certain technology advances back to preserve their revenues on old designs.

    So let’s have a look at the proposed design and how we might apply these principles at home …

     

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    As drawn the network topology looks like a wired backbone with 3 nodes for far flung wireless access points: a perfectly reasonable offering giving high reliability in the main wiring and using wireless only at the extremities. However redrawing the strands will reveal it to be a star topology: everything radiates from the central node ending 8PC.5. Should this node fail the entire network will collapse = SPOF.

    In a similar vein there is only 1 connection to the internet, so TIDAL streaming will fail if the land-line or local exchange fails, or is down for maintenance.

    My recommendation then is, instead of buying expensive CISCO 8 port switches (£1,000) buy 2 off NETGEAR consumer 16 port switches (2x £100) … and bi-wire the network.

    All enterprise servers have 2 GBE ports to accommodate bi-wiring. The more expensive NAS’s also come with 2 ports for this very reason. I can also recommend the HP Microserver, available for as little as £125 in the UK, for those who want a DIY server. Don’t use RAID, buy 2 servers and synchronise their files. That way if your main music server fails, you have a 2nd on tap! Windows users will also see the benefits of SMB multichannel with bi-wiring:

    https://blogs.technet.microsoft.com/josebda/2012/06/28/the-basics-of-smb-multichannel-a-feature-of-windows-server-2012-and-smb-3-0/

    and LINUX users can use channel bonding. Those TB transfers should now go twice as a fast.

    Internet connection failures can be reduced with a special type of modem which automatically switches between the wired WAN … and a 4G connection when the wired route is down.

    In case one of the 3 WAP’s fails … buy a 4th … but make them all inexpensive. Heck buy 5.

    If you are not inclined, or not capable, of maintaining the security passwords on your equipment … and you are serious ($13,000 sounds serious!!) … then I would recommend the same approach as an SMB without IT support … give a network specialist a small annual contract to monitor your network. Not only should he change the passwords regularly he will install network monitoring software to warn of any suspicious looking activity or poor performance suggesting component failure.

    Another topic not addressed which might be useful for the most important equipment: what happens if the electricity supply fails? Buy some UPS devices to make sure modem, main switch, main server cannot be taken out.

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    "That said, the Computer Audiophile Community is full of people much smarter and more experienced that I when it comes to networking. No matter the topic, there's always someone stronger, faster, or smarter whenever the audience is global."

     

    My apologies if I have halved your costs, doubled your bandwidth and made your network resilient to power failure, exchange failure, individual component failure and increased security.

    Enterprise architects eh - who'd want one? :S

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    It amuses me (as an IT man) to correct one accidental omission of mine ...

    ... the possibility of affordable 5GBE is on the horizon from a company called AQUANTIA

    http://www.aquantia.com/

    The main switch vendors will hate this since it will destroy their enterprise10 GBE sales and indeed may not support it with a switch product.

    My amusement is occasioned by the fact that 5 GBE needs the correct grade of Ethernet cable (category 6). Ironic ... or what (USB cable discriminators)?

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    9 hours ago, NOMBEDES said:

    Chris, great article.  In the novel 1984, Big Brother forced

    citizens to live in a connected dwelling.  In 2017, citizens are inviting audio and video surveillance into their homes.  The mind boggles.

     

    Most participating in this discussion will have strong passwords and, hopefully, other security features activated.   

     

    I, for one, will never have a connected bathroom scale, you never know who will hack your scale!

     

     

     

     

    OMG, I just figured out why the number on the scale is so high when I step on it. I've been hacked :~)

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    2 hours ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

     

    OMG, I just figured out why the number on the scale is so high when I step on it. I've been hacked :~)

     

    God knows what the hackers have done to your refrigerator.  

    It may have increased your standing ice cream order by X2!!!!

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    2 hours ago, The Computer Audiophile said:

     

    OMG, I just figured out why the number on the scale is so high when I step on it. I've been hacked :~)

     

    Yah, sure....  mine is getting higher but I can guarantee it has NOT been hacked!  Welcome to the club.  ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

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    12 minutes ago, NOMBEDES said:

     

    God knows what the hackers have done to your refrigerator.  

    It may have increased your standing ice cream order by X2!!!!

     

    7 minutes ago, Solstice380 said:

     

    Yah, sure....  mine is getting higher but I can guarantee it has NOT been hacked!  Welcome to the club.  ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

     

    The Russians are after us.

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