Been dealing with this for years. It doesn’t get better.
Been dealing with this for years. It doesn’t get better.
This one?
You’re so edgy! I’m jelly…
Us vs them… At least we can all agree on othering people we disagree with
I love my plants. I also love to eat them.
This is gonna fun…
…tens of
millionsbillions…
FTFY
You could’ve been online that entire time and still missed plenty of “things”
Yes please. Can we tax billionaires out of existence? That would be awesome
It’s in a tantalizing place.
137 light-years away
That would be me. It would go great with all the rest of my body part candles
No problem.
I actually just learned this lesson recently (in the last week). I have a NAS that I use for my PCs, and it also stores my media collection for Plex, it was natively sitting on the same network as my PCs, as that’s where I was most concerned about network speed. I was having it cross VLANs for the Plex stuff, and it was only when I got a Ubiquiti switch that I noticed that traffic was hitting the router when crossing the VLANs but not when the two subnets were the same.
I’m happy that my hard knock lesson can help someone avoid that same mistake.
I do worry that if I do get them I might hammer my router since the traffic streams will have to be routed between VLANs.
The key here is to not route traffic across VLANs. Choose one VLAN to host all your network video content (IP cameras and NVR). This way, since all traffic is on the same subnet, all the network traversal can happen on the switch (even layer 2 switches) and not need to ever touch the router.
Also, if you suspect there will be a decent amount of network traffic that needs to cross VLANs, it’s usually best to add an additional network interface that’s connected to the correct subnet. That way traffic can avoid the router.
We are living in a pretty dark timeline…