diablo2man
Occasional Visitor
I now have a very strange situation: my 1000M wired network is slower than 802.11N network. Here is the detail:
my 802.11N router is in my living room, which hook up with the Linksys PLK300 PowerLine AV Ethernet adapt.
My Laptop is in bedroom. Firstly the peer PLK300 adapter is connected with a trendnet 1000M x 8 port switch. And my laptop (intel 1000M network adapter) and my dns 323 (NAS) are connected to the switch.
It seems a bit complex but it is for the high speed local transfer speed between NAS and laptop. But I found the wired speed (2mbytes/s) is even slower than the wireless one (3mbytes/s), which are really weird. I just keep one line each time to test the transfer rate.
Firstly I thought it may caused by the PowerLine connection. So I disconnect the powerline, which making my laptop and dns just connected with each other by a switch (no internet access now). The speed is still pretty slow (2M) while the three devices involved are all 1000M interfaces.
Can anyone try to explain it?
my 802.11N router is in my living room, which hook up with the Linksys PLK300 PowerLine AV Ethernet adapt.
My Laptop is in bedroom. Firstly the peer PLK300 adapter is connected with a trendnet 1000M x 8 port switch. And my laptop (intel 1000M network adapter) and my dns 323 (NAS) are connected to the switch.
It seems a bit complex but it is for the high speed local transfer speed between NAS and laptop. But I found the wired speed (2mbytes/s) is even slower than the wireless one (3mbytes/s), which are really weird. I just keep one line each time to test the transfer rate.
Firstly I thought it may caused by the PowerLine connection. So I disconnect the powerline, which making my laptop and dns just connected with each other by a switch (no internet access now). The speed is still pretty slow (2M) while the three devices involved are all 1000M interfaces.
Can anyone try to explain it?