Now I do want gigabit to my computers, though. My main desktop has gigabit and I definitely need the speed because video editing (miniDV footage) requires about 11% of a gigE connection, which would be 110% of 100 Mbit.
I really don't want to mess with subnets and all that extraneous networking configuration. I use IPCop right now and simply have a lot of MAC addresses setup to use certain IP addresses so I get static IPs without having to configure them at each device.
I have to use 2 because my modem is strange and takes over 1:
I have my computers at 192.168.2.99 and less.
My main server is 192.168.2.2
My dsl modem is 192.168.2.1
My printers are 192.168.2.100 -> 109
Media boxes (MP101) .110 -> 119
Wireless Access Points .120 -> .129
Cameras .130 -> .139
Say I got two of the HP 24-port switches for $400. That would be $800, a very reasonable price for high end Procurve switches and port to price ratio. I then connect them together via a single gigabit cable. Then, everything that needs higher bandwidth, even including any 100 Mbit computers, will be attached to the first switch so it gets more bandwidth. The lower end devices, such as our security cameras, printers, wireless access points, home automation things, etc., could be attached to the second switch. They would then all be sharing that single gigabit connection but that wouldn't matter at all because I sincerely doubt it would ever even hit 100 Mbits total! The cameras hardly take a percent of 100 Mbit (four of them), printers--big deal, I wait an extra half second to transfer my large document. The printer is the bottleneck! And wireless, right now we're at G so that's 54 Mbits (MAX). I've got 1000 to work with.
I would rather not even buy a 100 Mbit switch at this point because $400 doesn't seem bad for price at all. Remember that it will be a rare occurrence that there will be three simultaneous users! Okay, I guess it could get to 5 or more with company. But, in many cases, there will only be a few people accessing the server. And streaming a DVD takes NOTHIN'! I had 13 simultaneous DVD streams going from my server without any hiccups at all. And on 100 Mbit I still got around 8 if I'm not mistaken. I sincerely doubt I would ever need more than 2 or 3 DVD streams at once--this is more of a proof of concept. We don't even have enough TVs! I was running them all in VLC on one computer.
I don't think I'm anywhere near the insufficient bandwidth problem. If I've got 23 full gigabit ports why would I bother plugging things into a 100 Mbit switch if I'm not out of ports? (24th for second gigabit switch). That's another issue. If I'm right at 24 ports, I don't need a second switch but then when I need another port, I'll have to unplug something or wait for another switch. That's why I really need to start with 48-ports. Remember this is simply a personal place of residence (home) and not a business in any way. I just happen to have quite a few ethernet devices (4 printers, 4 cameras, 2 wireless access points, 4 MP101's, TiVo, etc) so I need lots of ports but at low cost.
My main concern is that the switch could introduce issues. I was using two D-Link 8-port gigabit switches ($50) and they were introducing severe problems into network activity. Using two computers would cause severe stuttering video. As soon as I took them out and went back to my 100 Mbit switches, everything ran fine. So the switches can introduce big problems, obviously! I just hadn't ever had 100 Mbit switch issues so it took me a while to start diagnosing the switches as problematic.