Comment by cyberax
17 hours ago
Sigh. 1gbps is widely available, even in relatively poor countries.
And if you're making a _new_ device that should last for 5-10 years, it's just stupid to use technology that is getting obsoleted even now.
17 hours ago
Sigh. 1gbps is widely available, even in relatively poor countries.
And if you're making a _new_ device that should last for 5-10 years, it's just stupid to use technology that is getting obsoleted even now.
>Sigh. 1gbps is widely available, even in relatively poor countries.
No, it isn't. Not even by far.
>And if you're making a _new_ device that should last for 5-10 years, it's just stupid to use technology that is getting obsoleted even now.
Anything higher than 1gbps would ramp up the cost today.
Rich countries suffer from a first-mover disadvantage: companies existed heavily in building internet infrastructure based on DSL and DOCSIS in the 2000s, so they are now trying to milk every cent of profit out of it while they can. Meanwhile in poor countries "the internet" was a 1Gbit LAN cable daisy-chained between houses, and the first large-scale commercial rollout is fiber - which is pretty much impossible to install these days at speeds below 1Gbps.
Going faster doesn't really cost that much extra. 10Gbps networking gear is 20(!) years old and considered obsolete by the rich countries, you can buy brand-new transceivers for literally $30. Go second-hand or Chinese and you can find them for $5. Basic 10G L3 switches? A bit over $10/port. Same with NICs. Heck, we're now at a point where homelabbers can get a 2x25G link between a pair of servers for less than $100!
It's 2026, and 1Gbps is obsolete. If faster gear is still expensive to you, it is only because you are getting ripped off by the western premium brands like Cisco.
> No, it isn't. Not even by far.
It is. You typically either have only cellular connectivity or you have fiber, with very little in-between. And fiber provides 1/10G capability.
Is it _used_ universally? No. But the capability is there.
> Anything higher than 1gbps would ramp up the cost today.
This is not going to be a cheap device _anyway_.
Working in this field - yeah don't underestimate what's available in "poor" countries. Most do better than poorly governed "rich" countries. And don't use it as an excuse to aim lower. CPE class devices do have a pretty long lifetime.