1 Gbps is laughably slow. It doesn't even keep up with hard disks. Network attached storage is crippled by 1 Gbps networking. It's ancient. I remember doing an assignment in 2005 to design a network on a budget, deciding to "splurge" on gigabit, and finding it very much affordable. That was 17 years ago, and yet consumer networking barely budged since then.
10 Gbps is still below the 7 GB/s that a single NVMe on PCIe 4 (which is readily available) can achieve.
25 Gbps is still below that.
I'd say 100 Gbps is where the current practical maximum is more or less. You'd have a hard time writing or uploading data that fast on anything resembling consumer hardware.
10 Gbps is still below the 7 GB/s that a single NVMe on PCIe 4 (which is readily available) can achieve.
25 Gbps is still below that.
I'd say 100 Gbps is where the current practical maximum is more or less. You'd have a hard time writing or uploading data that fast on anything resembling consumer hardware.