NetGear ProSafe FS728TS 24-Port Ethernet Switch FS728TSNA
Highlights: Layer 2/3 Managed Ethernet Switch, 24 x 10Base-T/100Base-TX (RJ-45), 4 x 1000Base-T (RJ-45), 2 x SFP, Switch Fabric... (more)
List Price: $319.99
Low Price: $190.40
Savings: $129.59
(40.50%)
Avg Rating: 4 of 5.0 by 1 users.
Stores and Price Comparison
| Store Name | Store Rating | Base Price | Shipping + Tax | Final Price | |
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| TECHONWEB |
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$239.99 |
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| LA Computer Center |
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$258.99 |
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TigerDirect.com
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$226.99 |
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$190.40 |
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$219.99 |
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Product Information
More Flexible, More Powerful Smart Switching! NETGEAR expands its line of award-winning ProSafe Smart Switches with a suite of 10/100 Stackable Smart Switches. The ProSafe Stackable Smart Switches adds the flexibility of economical, modular growth paired with a more robust management feature set and still gives you the ease of use and affordability you expect from ProSafe Smart Switches. With options of 24 or 48 10/100 ports, both of the Stackable Smart Switches offer 4 Gigabit Ethernet ports for high speed connectivity. Two of the Gigabit Ethernet ports offer the option of fiber connectivity via Small Form-factor Pluggable (SFP) GBIC** slots for long distance links. NETGEAR's ProSafe FS728TS and FS752TS deliver performance and scalability through a 4Gbps, dual-ring, resilient stacking architecture with the ability to mix and match to stack up to six units or 192 10/100 ports—and manage them all at a single IP address!Suggested Similar Products and Related Accessories
Review Summary
1 Amazon user ratings

0 Epinion user ratings
Not Rated
Spotlight Review
This is not a bad switch for the price
Written
By T. Chung
on 2006-03-09I'm impressed with this switch for this price. The switch works right out of the box as an unmanaged switch, but if you need qos, 802.1q vlan capability, radius authentication, etc then you can do so through the web based gui. the gui is pretty straightforward, nothing fancy. The only down side is that the gbic cost more than the switch itself! So, if you have the option of stacking with copper for shorter runs then that's definitely the way to go.



