• @[email protected]
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        fedilink
        29 months ago

        My canon ink tank type printer from mid COVID era is the same, didn’t realise it was only 10/100 on the wired port until I was looking at the switch one day and wondered why I had a yellow light instead of green, was about to run a new network cable until I checked the printer

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          49 months ago

          I guess you have to have a very particular workload, and printer, to need a gigabit line…

          Right?

        • @[email protected]
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          fedilink
          English
          19 months ago

          Printers really don’t need even 100mbps though. They’re just not fast enough to spit out the prints your sending even at those speeds. So I get it.

          • @[email protected]
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            fedilink
            29 months ago

            I get it too, but it was a bit of a shock given that the selling points for everything is bigger better faster stronger, otherwise why would people upgrade. It’s like finding something with a micro USB port on it instead of type c

    • @Michal
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      59 months ago

      Could be something wrong with a cable? A damaged cable can downgrade your connection from gigabit to 100mb

      • @[email protected]
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        fedilink
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        39 months ago

        Or to 10mbps, half duplex. I’ve witnessed this. My former company was trying to sell a client a new server because it was too slow when I noticed it was only operating at 10/half, instead of the 1000/full that both it and the switch was capable of. Some testing later, and the problem was at the server side cable termination, a quick re-termination and they were up to gigabit. Grabbed a spare run to the switch and connected another cable after verifying it was good and the company went from 10M/half to a LAG of 2000/full in the matter of about an hour.

        The speed complaints stopped.