There are four categories of NETGEAR switches:
Unmanaged switches – For small or home offices (SOHO) or simple networks that need little or no administration, unmanaged Ethernet switches provide plug-and-play connectivity.
Unmanaged Plus switches – NETGEAR offers a unique line of ProSAFE® Plus switches that fill the gap between managed and unmanaged switches. These offer monitoring and basic configuration capabilities beyond simple unmanaged switches.
Smart switches –
NETGEAR Managed switches– The high end of NETGEAR switches are the ProSAFE Managed Switches designed to grow with your network needs, providing security, high availability, data traffic optimization and manageability for any enterprise or campus network.
Here are just a few reasons why SMBs are turning to NETGEAR switches:
NETGEAR’s managed switches provide control over the entire network through a “single pane of glass.”
The NETGEAR ProSAFE Network Management System is based on the Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) to control data flow for any Layer 2 or Layer 3 switch, including third-party devices such as wireless access points, servers, and printers. It uses a web interface and graphs network traffic in real time and logs network statistics. The SNMP management systems also detect network bottlenecks and send email notifications to alert managers of problems.
One of the advantages of managed Ethernet switching is that it can prioritize data traffic. This means that voice and video traffic, which is more sensitive to network delays, can be given priority over other data traffic such as email, to ensure smooth video streaming and reliable voice-over-IP (VoIP) calls.
NETGEAR switches include integrated security features to monitor for unauthorized data traffic and implement network security policies using features such as Access Control Lists (ACLs) to manage user access and port-based authentication to monitor network devices.
Managed switches also can filter incoming through a monitoring port makes it easier to manage data traffic and provides early detection of network threats.
In addition to promoting data throughput, Ethernet switches can maintain separate virtual networks. These switches feature VLAN support so one unit can be configured to act as separate switches, separating different departments for greater security.
These switches have virtual IP stacking so they can be aggregated, adding additional data ports so the entire stack still performs as a single switch. This simplifies management and promotes resiliency and higher data availability.
Aggregating links provides a fatter data pipe as well as automatic load balancing and port failover. Link aggregation not only ensures optimal throughput, but redundancy in the event of a network failure.
The NETGEAR Virtual Chassis system lets you stack switches to deliver higher data throughput with lower latency. Using the Virtual Chassis creates a highly resilient, bi-directional network with automatic failover. You can even hot-swap switches without rebooting.
Many of these switches also feature PoE for use with wireless access points, LAN security cameras, and other applications where you want to install network hardware but don’ have access to power.
SMBs like these switches because they future proof their network investment. NETGEAR’s Virtual Chassis, Distributed Link Aggregation, and SNMP-based management allow the switching infrastructure to grow with the network.
If you need help designing your Ethernet switching network, we will gladly review your requirements at no cost and help you design your own high-performance network.
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