
Netgear GS724T ProSafe 24-Port Gigabit Smart Switch
Customer Rating Score
Product Features
- Interfaces 24 RJ-45 connectors for 10BASE-T, 100BASE-TX, and 1000BASE-T (Auto Uplink on all ports) and 2 SFP slots for fiber Gigabit Ethernet modules
- Full-duplex IEEE 802.3x pause frame flow control
- Forwarding modes - Store-and-forward
- Half-duplex backpressure control
- Box Contents - 24-port Gigabit Smart Switch, Rubber footpads, Power cord, Rack-mount kit, Smart Switch resource CD
Product Description
Joining NETGEAR's family of Smart Switches with simple switch management at no extra cost, this 24-port Gigabit switch is high on value and capability. With 24 10/100/1000 Mbps ports, each capable of powering 2000 Mbps of data throughput in full-duplex mode, plus two optional fiber ports, it provides fast backbone and connects servers or power users, delivering large amounts of multimedia, image, and video information in no time at all. Ideal for combining 10, 100, and 1000 Mbps devices it delivers 10/100/1000 automatic speed and full/half-duplex sensing plus Auto Uplink on every port. More Details >>Customer Reviews
We'd been chugging along with a 10/100 switch at the non-profit where I work for far too long. Being the most tech savvy of our employees (most of whom are not remotely so) I took it upon myself to upgrade to Gigabit. More >>
Nathan Beauchamp
Who could ask for anything more? If you are looking for a bare-bones L2 switch with advanced L2 functionality, but without the high-price and need for advanced training then this is the switch you need to get. More >>
Nomticus
The fan is loud, and on one of the three I bought the fan bearings are REALLY loud. However, the thing is really fast and really inexpensive for being able to provide VLANs and QOS for a LAN. More >>
A. Cardinale
My NFS write performance from my iMac to Linux Server was horrible, and after trying a whole bunch of optimizations. I decided to see if network errors were the culprit. More >>
Rahoul Puri
Works fine under light load, but starts dropping packets like crazy under even medium loads. Goes into an odd state where a whole lot of data seems to disappear mysteriously, even when the network is mainly idle. More >>
Christopher Strong