• IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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    4 days ago

    Unless you need 6ft of cable or you just run wires on the floor it’s more like $200 of plenium rated cable, and keystone jacks and the labor involved with the run.

    My house with a half finished basement (easy access) took probably 16-20 hours running to 5 rooms.

    • nimble@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      4 days ago

      Yeah when i did my house i was quoted $100-200 a drop and that was years ago. I bought materials for 20 drops for about 1k (cables, keystones, plates, cable tester, ethernet cutter, puncher, drywall knife, flex drill bit, wall fishing tape, network switch, and a bunch of other stuff im probably forgetting). It took me 1 hour per drop on average. Some were easy, some were a pain in the ass. Now you can save on materials slightly by doing 1 drop per room whereas i did individual drops for each jack (because i wanted full bandwidth on each line), but either way it is going to end up more costly than an access point or mesh system unless you’re just running one line within the same room.

      Definitely worth it if you care about the speed or reliability of your connection but i think for most people these days it’s probably overkill.

      If you do go wiring everything then now you’re mostly already set up to do some Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) devices for cameras, access points etc. And next thing you know you’re an amateur home networker!

      • PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca
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        2 days ago

        Honestly, my place isn’t that big, but I can cover the whole place with a single wireless access point, and get fast, reliable, stable connection everywhere.

        In the room with the AP (my home office and gaming PC) I have zero jitter, zero packet loss, and 2ms ping.

        Wire hasn’t been needed for a good connection for a long time