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Chapter 1: Introduction
Welcome
16-Port or 24-Port 10/100/1000 Gigabit Switch
Chapter 1: Introduction

Welcome

Thank you for choosing the 16-Port or 24-Port 10/100/1000 Gigabit Switch. The 16 Port and 24-Port 10/100/1000
Gigabit Switches provide non-blocking, wire speed switching for your 10, 100, and 1000 megabit network clients.
Drop this switch in place of your current workgroup hub or switch, and you can upgrade your high-requirement
workstations to full Gigabit speeds as necessary, while continuing to service other clients at their current speeds.
Or build your network from the ground up, with appropriate link speeds for each user's requirements. Either way,
it's perfect for graphics, multimedia, and other applications that have to move large files across the network
quickly. And when you need to expand your network even further, the SR2024C has two Mini-GBIC ports that let
you add fiber-optic capability easily and cost effectively.
With the 16-Port or 24-Port 10/100/1000 Gigabit Switch, you can connect your existing 10/100 Ethernet network
to a Gigabit server backbone without any additional equipment. All ports have automatic MDI/MDI-X crossover
detection, so you don't have to worry about the cable type. Each port independently and automatically negotiates
for best speed and whether to run in half- or full-duplex mode. Address learning and aging is supported, as well
as 802.3x flow control with head-of-line blocking prevention to keep your high-speed clients from bogging down
in lower-speed traffic. Fast store-and-forward switching prevents damaged packets from being passed on into
the network.
World famous Linksys reliability and the limited lifetime warranty give you peace of mind and the rackmount form
factor integrates smoothly into your network infrastructure. Let the Linksys 16-Port or 24-Port 10/100/1000
Gigabit Switch kick your network into high gear.
This user guide will give you all the information you need to connect, set up, and configure your Switch.
Ethernet: a network protocol that specifies
how data is placed on and retrieved from a
common transmission medium.