"would you like a warranty?". NO! "Okay, would you like a Warranty?" NO NO NO NO!!! *Dell rep adds to invoice because no one ever looks at the invoices*. "Okay, if you are sure you don't want a warranty, I won't ask again" ...but they'll add anyways because Dell knows better then you
@@Nighterlev You didn't read my reply carefully. I wasn't talking about the system, I was talking about the Mellanox card he's using. And I've later confirmed it's only a Gen 3, meaning those 2 x 100Gig cards will over-sub the slot if he tries to LAG them together and use them. No idea why Mellanox sold that 2x100G gen 3 card. Dumb, dumb, dumb.
First world problem: Linus now has enough throughput to actually wear out the SSDs on his machines in 2-3 years rather than the average 5 year lifetime of these drives.
but that is also probably a tax deductible expense to them and they likely buy in bulk with discounts from the supplier this setup is pretty unrealistic for home consumer use since chances are most average folks are probably running 4K video at home tops and not using multiple editing rigs all accessing video files near simultaneously.
Yeah, he totally jinxed himself there. I don't know the full extent of his network build, but it doesn't look like he's figured out how to do redundant servers serving the same data and load balancing yet.
I remember spending $30K for 1GB 48 port switches at the turn of the century...and was HAPPY to pay it. I am in hardware development and I can tell you that 400GB is right around the corner. The Super-7 Cloud folks still want more...and are willing to pay for it. It is also one of the reasons PCIe Gen 5 is coming out so quickly after Gen 4
I love how linus always improves the limit of workflow for his employees , on my company if u ask for a better computer to work faster, u might get fired
That's the advantage of his business: Any upgrades become video content, but often will be partly paid for by the suppliers looking to sponsor LTT marketing them.
If I had a nickel for every time I heard “ridge wallet is trying to redefine the wallet,” I could afford a ridge wallet (Edit) holy crap stop telling me that I shouldn’t buy one. I never said I was going to. I have a wallet already. I don’t need advice or criticism. This is just a bloody joke!
@@JoebDragon dude that's not just 3 servers. Whonnock 3 means it's their _third version_ of a rendering/storage server. They've got like at least 6 or 7 different servers running different tasks, from NAS servers, PFsense routers, to compute/render output, as well as individual workstations for each editor. Crazy computing here.
As a recommendation for transferring large files, the option without buffer is better. By command line it would be the / J option The multithreading option is best for large numbers of files. Another option to try would be a multipart FTP
Linus this is real IT stuff please make more of this, some of us also run really complicated networks and knowing what router, switch and hardware to use is valuable.
Only people who had network bottlenecks can understand why Linus is so amazed. It's freaking amazing, who remembers having and using a 10Mbps Network Switch?
yeah. 15K is one fabric module in a datacenter switch. And two 800W PSUs? How about 8 PSUs at 3000W each? But still a pretty capable machine for such a small office.
My WiFi chugs on local http transfers (talking anywhere between 4-10Mbit), and I can't convince my mom to let me just buy a better router. So I can look at this and say at least there is hope.
A switch will use RAM as a cache for MAC addresses/IP Addresses and which ports they are assigned to which massively speeds up look-ups. It's obviously also used for the firmware, and any additional features such as firewalls, address filtering, virtual LANs and so on, it's also used to speed up the data transfers across the network by bypassing the switches CPU which can be a bottleneck with such high speed networking. With all of that running you can quickly run out of RAM even with 8GB on switches as beastly as the one in the video. You can run DHCP servers, NTP servers and even FTP servers directly off of certain switches/routers like Cisco stuff, and I would imagine the Dell switch can also do those things.
Well, there *is* a lot that *can* be done with that memory, the question is how much of that is actually intended by the manufacturer. Though, okay, granted, I'm not very used to the world of enterprise hardware, I only know that the prices are insane and that's about it ._.
@@dside_ru All of that stuff is intended by the manufacturer, they charge a fortune for most of it, but access to all of those features are absolutely a requirement by enterprise and dell et al are more than happy to accommodate as long as the customer is willing to pay for it. If you've only ever seen consumer switches and routers then all of this is alien to you, it certainly was to me at first, but in enterprise that dell switch is only the start, and the features we've mentioned are only some of what's possible, and it's all intended use cases that the manufacturer will offer support on.
I'd like to see it, but link aggregation hashing will make it very difficult to see it with a single file transfer. You'd need to have the server listening on multiple IPs and for each TCP stream to select a different interface on each end.
@ RDMA bypasses anti-virus as the packets go through the fpga instead of the cpu. Most antivirus only analyze what goes through the cpu. FPGAs are a blind spot in security right now.
1:14 The POINT to a fast network switch isn't a single machine to a single other machine file copy. It's being able to do fast file transfers on 5 or 10 such copies AT THE SAME TIME from multiple different machines. Unless you're plotting Chia at k35 or some such with a multi-GPU plotter, then it becomes transfers from one machine to multiple other machines.
There is a channel called, Tech Deals, it's a husband and wife team, and I wouldn't say the wife is super techy, but her husband is, and when her husband starts waffling on about tech specs, you can see she is just WTF, but finds it cute! th-cam.com/channels/Css3QxegBkF8BAetIo0qXA.html
For those who have some difficulty understanding what they're doing...here an explanation! LTT works on a centralised information infrastructure system...meaning that all projects are on a central system (server) and that editors will never have the project they're working on, on their computer. So with that in mind they need a very fast connection to that information (as they're working with huge files) and preferably a connection that doesn't put any cpu stress on the server or the local device (as the local device needs its cpu to digest the information and the server needs its cpu for operation/not crashing). This solution accomplishes both...tbh I didn't know about the second functionality as well...thats why LTT is so DAMN interesting
@@cummingtonite691 if you’re holding a cable with and end going one direction and the other end the opposite, then bend it over 180 degrees, they are now going the same direction. Just don’t pinch it tight and you’re golden.
Thing with Linus and his group is that not only they explore the next gen tech, they get to live that next gen tech almost immediately. I mean I am pretty sure, Linus will upgrade all his network with this and everyone there get to enjoy it.
@nils. Congratulations! I'm using Gentoo testing branch with LTO overlay and optimized to max. This on a laptop, which has it's own hardware and power saving challenges, I mean configuration isn't trivial. I'm very grateful for Anthony! And also to Linus for showing Linux and talking about Linux. Though I certainly would hope more Linux content. I migrated to 100% Linux user about 5 years ago, and from that point on my love and appreciation for Linux has grown every year. The more I learn, the better it gets.
Ah, my people have finally been recognised by the great LTT, thanks to Anthony. No but seriously it's good that they're promoting Linux. If any demographic should try it out and see if it works for them, it's tech fans.
@nils. Haha, that's fair enough though. Once Linux is up and running, it generally won't change unless you change it: I can't imagine ElementaryOS force-changing his browser on him, or anything like that. In that regard it's also friggin perfect for giving to people who aren't super techy. It rarely breaks for no reason, and they're getting no viruses on that thing.
I may be alone in this, but I think the aesthetics of the Thinkstation are on-point! Understated but still high-performance. You know it means business (both literally and figuratively). If I had $20,000 for a PC, and I actually needed the power, I'd buy one of those puppies over a Mac any day.
Dude, some guys in the comments are talking about 100Gb "internet" speed and you expect LTT to show them "advanced" tools? Nah, they just wanna see numbers and comparisons...
You should use LACP to workstations to get 50 Gbps connections to everybody using two 25 Gbps links in parallel. That also provides link redundancy so you don't lose internet if only one fiber fails.
@@netd3218 you do realize, that we can see the video without clicking on the link or upping your view counter. Plus, we can see what your recent comments are right? Lol.
400gbe is the highest we have right now without delving into basically running a IX. blogs.cisco.com/datacenter/cisco-makes-terabit-scale-ethernet-networking-a-reality-with-400-gbe-technology
@@judgesh 800GbE is just around the corner (~1 year give or take) and then 1.6TbE should follow with that or not too long afterwards. I've seen some 32x 800GbE (2RU) switches teased as sampling already.
My work places of the past have had 12,000+ cisco devices with uptimes on the matter of years less software upgrades that never went sideways. You are paying for a decade of trouble-free of packet moving and an army of people familiar with everything cisco. Dell bought their switch line by acquisition of Force 10. Force 10 had the problem they had a great product line but who skimps on DC switches that until very recently cost 10 -40 grand to populate with optics. The Dell switches appear to be fine gear and should be able to be discounted at 50-70% when purchased with Dell storage or Dell compute.
@@christopherwhull It's the old adage, "Nobody has ever been fired for going with IBM", and you've been able to replace IBM with Cisco in that phrase for a decade now.
That wasn't even the server, that was just a switch. It's the part that takes in all the connections to the PCs and puts them through to the actual server in an orderly fashion. The server racks are way, way crazier.
It must be really fun to work for a boss who thinks of tech as an investment and constantly upgrades their tech to make them more efficient, instead of bosses who think of tech as costs
You didn't connect the PHP through the SQL-protocol. Rookie mistake. Just reroute the data as a vector constant in Java, it lets you smart access into a PCI backdoor instead.
Honestly I wish he would have at least tried a live distro. Wouldn't surprise me if it's just full speed right out of the box without any extra software than a typical distro comes packaged with.
@@eideticex sometimes i think this Linus guy only manages to open 'Task manager' and put RAM sticks in motherboards.. He seems more a sales guy than a 'tech' guy xD
he's pretty much become just a host now. its not worth his time learning to do those things, when he can pay others to do it instead. and u will probably see them testing the 100gbps transfer when they put another video, maybe 2 more, for the network aggregation and integration into their current setup.
Be careful if you start making your own optical network in the office. Touching the cable end with bare skin could introduce micgoglass in your blood stream. Optical cables are sneaky dangerous like that. Much more sneaky than the spiky biting copper cables.
what people tend to forget is that those are over the local network. *Not* to the internet. chances are you would theoreaticly easily reach 100 mb/s on your local network. (required your hardware, switch, router/modem, heck even cabels aren't a decade old.)
@@gh0stedone472 no you still don't get it. This is over the network. No internet involved. Just one PC to a one standing right beside it. Everyone and their dog has 1gbit at home because that has been standard for a decade and more.
I'm in ADSL2 so around 6 to 7.5 MB/s for me so ~ 55Mb/s, if you're not downloading a game it's more than fine tbh. It's only a problem if you have a roommate downloading stuff while you're playing esports titles lmao
25gig on OM3 cable huh? But you are on the right track having 25gig / 100gig connectivity with RDMA. This will work really well. You might want to look into managing your shares as a namespace so that you can have multiple different storage servers show up as one “big share”.
The 25 Gbits per second should hit the top at something about 3,125 Gbytes per second, of course RDMA should have some kind of overhead too, but that was freaking awesome anyway, need more of this content, time for a try on remake of the all flash array.
This has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with internet speeds. This is to connect the editors to the video storage server with more bandwidth so they can edit more efficiently. They 'only' have 5GBIT internet, so 10GBE is plenty for the internet connection alone.
Jake: "I think we technically have a warranty"
It's a Dell......You have a warranty....probably 4
Dell, the warranty seller.
lenovo
Probably 50 yrs of warranty that you clearly said no 50 times to Dell
"would you like a warranty?". NO! "Okay, would you like a Warranty?" NO NO NO NO!!! *Dell rep adds to invoice because no one ever looks at the invoices*. "Okay, if you are sure you don't want a warranty, I won't ask again" ...but they'll add anyways because Dell knows better then you
That you didn’t order...
"I think we have a warranty" 3:49
It's Dell, whether you wanted it or not, you're going to get a warranty.
@@fran.klindic the accent makes it hard to understand no offense.
@@fran.klindic try making a video in your native language because there isn't a lot of non english tech content.
I watched this at 1.25 speed so the transfer was even quicker!
What bout 2× speed?
Lol
Fuck, 125 gbps. That insane. 😂
@@m.yogeshranjan7494 Diminishing return, maybe?
"Let us know if you want to see that"
As if he hasn't done it already.
O b a m a
I don't think there's ever been a time that Linus's has said let us know if you want to see that and my answer wasn't an immediate yes
I didn't catch the brand/type of 100GigE card, but I hope it's PCI-E gen 4 vs gen 3. If not, the two ports will over-sub the slot.
I just found out that category 8 now gets 150 feet. I want to now have it installed at home
@@Nighterlev You didn't read my reply carefully. I wasn't talking about the system, I was talking about the Mellanox card he's using. And I've later confirmed it's only a Gen 3, meaning those 2 x 100Gig cards will over-sub the slot if he tries to LAG them together and use them. No idea why Mellanox sold that 2x100G gen 3 card. Dumb, dumb, dumb.
A bottleneck at LMG is "the rest of the world"
Lol
Trademark and shirt lol LTTstore
Except nasa
@@loopy5893 pretty sure linus's budget comes from renting NASA simulation time
LMAOO SO TRUE X)
First world problem: Linus now has enough throughput to actually wear out the SSDs on his machines in 2-3 years rather than the average 5 year lifetime of these drives.
but that is also probably a tax deductible expense to them and they likely buy in bulk with discounts from the supplier this setup is pretty unrealistic for home consumer use since chances are most average folks are probably running 4K video at home tops and not using multiple editing rigs all accessing video files near simultaneously.
This is why Linus installed optical cables at home, as a relatively cheap proof of concept
@@shrinivaspai th-cam.com/video/jvzeZCZluJ0/w-d-xo.html
Thanks
jpnewpic88.men
"this is hopefully the final solution for our network"
Linus in 2021: so we're upgrading to 1tb per second
Australians managed 1 terabit at the end of January already, so the technology exists
Just the infrastructure doesn't.
One could call it the Final Solution
@@Dudae_ or they could not
Yeah, he totally jinxed himself there. I don't know the full extent of his network build, but it doesn't look like he's figured out how to do redundant servers serving the same data and load balancing yet.
@@phoenixl3g3nd73 australia still using copper
LMG : Why can't I get the warranty
DELL: We saw your video
🔥
I thought dell had a... thing for warranties :D
@@bloodraven2537 only selling warranty
I have no idea what's going on.
Files go brrrrr. That’s about the entirety of my knowledge here
Old man likes expensive products and knows a lot about them
still watched it till the end
8:55 is when he finally dumbs it down a bit lol
basically download video game very fast
can’t wait for “we got 1 terabit networking”
thanks for the insane amount of likes 😧
That hardware would be a "Bridge to Terabithia".
...
Terrible, I know.
Give it a month
@@netd3218 i expected rickroll to be honest
just get ten of those, easy
Nasa use 1 tb networking servers its fast i mean fast
I remember spending $30K for 1GB 48 port switches at the turn of the century...and was HAPPY to pay it. I am in hardware development and I can tell you that 400GB is right around the corner. The Super-7 Cloud folks still want more...and are willing to pay for it. It is also one of the reasons PCIe Gen 5 is coming out so quickly after Gen 4
He’s so excited. Watching him talk about this is like watching my 5yo twins talk about Paw Patrol
Yooooo paw patrol is the shit
@@brandongreene3213 no
@@brandongreene3213 wtf lol
It's his screen personality. Excitement makes it more fun to watch.
The daddio in me approves
"Let us know if you want to see that."
YES. Yes, we want to see that Linus.
I love how linus always improves the limit of workflow for his employees , on my company if u ask for a better computer to work faster, u might get fired
"cries in 100 megabytes ethernet"
@@guiguigodro "Cries in 1Mb/s Internet"
@@guiguigodro thats GbE
That's the advantage of his business: Any upgrades become video content, but often will be partly paid for by the suppliers looking to sponsor LTT marketing them.
@@ncredibledark7926 thats some good internet right there.
"Hopefully this is the last upgrade we'll need."
So I'll see you next year for the upgrade.
6 months
@@axiaty2806 2 weeks
@@joshuaroper9530 1st of January
@@axiaty2806 tommorow
today
"Let us know if you want to see that."
Yes, always yes.
2020: "Last solution we'll ever need to that problem"...
2077: "A 100TB/s quantum entanglement switch for our 50k holographic videos, HOLY SHIT"
2022*
One month later*
In the next hour*
in next minutes*
I like 2077
If I had a nickel for every time I heard “ridge wallet is trying to redefine the wallet,” I could afford a ridge wallet
(Edit) holy crap stop telling me that I shouldn’t buy one. I never said I was going to. I have a wallet already. I don’t need advice or criticism. This is just a bloody joke!
lmao
accurate
No you probably could afford to buy a stack of ridge wallets!
@@mrcherp9725 lol, you underestimate how expensive Ridge wallets are
2020 was pretty much sponsored by ridge wallet
Just use a mobile cover with card space.
Linus: "We got 100 Gigabit Networking! HOLY SHIT!"
Me, looking at my 100mb Network: "It's ok Rocky, you go when you feel like it."
This comment is gold LUl
@FreezeMelt YT that's your internet, not your local network. Linus doesn't have a 100Gbps internet connection either
@FreezeMelt YT Me with an even sadder face: 2mbps
@FreezeMelt YT are you using standard copper Ethernet (e.g. Cat5e)? That normally only does exactly 10, 100, and 1000+ Mbps
@@lights-fo8et sounds more like Power-LAN...
Linus doesn't get more enthusiastic than when he gets to play with networking, love it!
Let's all acknowledge how genius it is that linus is able to monetize and profit from all of the upgrades he makes to his office and his home
So if that's a Dell 48 port switch does that mean it comes with 48 warranties?
47 left, so that should be fine
you mean 96 warranties, they sold them 2 warranties in Secret Shopper
@@katech6020 so prime 95 warranties remain
97 remain, there were 2 warranties for the case itself
96
Linus: We just transferred 100GB of data in 20 seconds.
Me: Is that Candaian Seconds or American Seconds?
Candaian?
@@trapstoner American?
Jamaican?
what's that in European seconds
@@albert2236 i wonder...
Linus: "We're not calling it Whonnock 3"
Also linus: "this is Whonnock 3"
True lool
3 servers?? You guys need to go ceph for storage
@@JoebDragon dude that's not just 3 servers.
Whonnock 3 means it's their _third version_ of a rendering/storage server.
They've got like at least 6 or 7 different servers running different tasks, from NAS servers, PFsense routers, to compute/render output, as well as individual workstations for each editor.
Crazy computing here.
I heard him calling it new new whonnock
That's probably Jake who put the name since he's probably configured the server (also writer for this video).
Imagine being like omg my game didn’t install in 10 seconds ughhh this internet sucksss
@@netd3218 rickroll?
@@netd3218 please guys report this bot
That's probably the future when people attempt to install games of today, which will by then be considered retro.
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All these bots are so annoying
As a recommendation for transferring large files, the option without buffer is better.
By command line it would be the / J option
The multithreading option is best for large numbers of files.
Another option to try would be a multipart FTP
Ah yes, now I can finally transfer all my "homework" from one PC to another.
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... and update CoD Warzone
Yeah... “homework”...
Ngl i need one too
@@WILLYB3ST shut up
2020 Linus: "...The last solution that we'll need to that problem..."
2021 Linus: Terabit Networking video
2022 Linus: Petabyte Networking
2023 Linus: Zettabyte Networking
2077 Linus: ^Those are rookie numbers. **waves walking stick**
Linus this is real IT stuff please make more of this, some of us also run really complicated networks and knowing what router, switch and hardware to use is valuable.
Linus once looked at his child the way he looked at that server
Naah not that lovingly right?
I lost brain cells reading that
Damn this used to be the speed of a backbone server for the internet, for our country!!!! some 10 years ago :-O
Only people who had network bottlenecks can understand why Linus is so amazed.
It's freaking amazing, who remembers having and using a 10Mbps Network Switch?
"Now my employees don't have a "but muh ingestion" excuse."
R.I.P. LMG staff.
RIP Tyler
@@GoPotato69 ooh. Low blow, man.
@@raawesome3851 wasnt meant to be a low blow lol it was just that it reminded me, so sad ;(
@@GoPotato69 same.
Our old ''standard 10gb/s"
Me : sure , old stuff
"standard"
Network engineers are out here wondering what the fuss is about
No one:
Linus: 15k switch!
Me: **configures and deploys 100k+ chassis based switches on a regular basis** ok?
Laughs in Service Provider level P routers.
Ditto. Used to sell QLogic SANBoxes for $16k a pop back in the day... Ahh I'm dating myself.
yeah. 15K is one fabric module in a datacenter switch. And two 800W PSUs? How about 8 PSUs at 3000W each?
But still a pretty capable machine for such a small office.
My WiFi chugs on local http transfers (talking anywhere between 4-10Mbit), and I can't convince my mom to let me just buy a better router. So I can look at this and say at least there is hope.
I can't wait for Linus to have 100 Gigabit Ethernet at his house.
This isn't internet speed. The 100gig is their LAN server. They still only have 10gig internet in their office.
@@PabzRoz No one said anything about internet. Linus literally has a server inside the house.
@Jamal Joyner but can you read?
Linus: "Today we are upgrading the Bathroom PC to 100 Gbit."
I cant wait toll we have GigaByte, not bit.
"Why are you in the pantry?"
"My files are still copying from the server"
A train of conversation LMG team can't use.
until they have to make a full backup of petabyte project
then again they probably do it incrementally
"I think we have a warrenty, but that hasn't stopped you before"
Not needing a warrenty hasn't stopped dell before
"It must have expandable memory for a reason!"
Well, it could be ease of manufacturing.
Some large swiches can devide them self in routing blocks. This is usualy what the added memory is for
A switch will use RAM as a cache for MAC addresses/IP Addresses and which ports they are assigned to which massively speeds up look-ups. It's obviously also used for the firmware, and any additional features such as firewalls, address filtering, virtual LANs and so on, it's also used to speed up the data transfers across the network by bypassing the switches CPU which can be a bottleneck with such high speed networking. With all of that running you can quickly run out of RAM even with 8GB on switches as beastly as the one in the video.
You can run DHCP servers, NTP servers and even FTP servers directly off of certain switches/routers like Cisco stuff, and I would imagine the Dell switch can also do those things.
You can also run docker on the switch and run some extra services.
Well, there *is* a lot that *can* be done with that memory, the question is how much of that is actually intended by the manufacturer.
Though, okay, granted, I'm not very used to the world of enterprise hardware, I only know that the prices are insane and that's about it ._.
@@dside_ru All of that stuff is intended by the manufacturer, they charge a fortune for most of it, but access to all of those features are absolutely a requirement by enterprise and dell et al are more than happy to accommodate as long as the customer is willing to pay for it.
If you've only ever seen consumer switches and routers then all of this is alien to you, it certainly was to me at first, but in enterprise that dell switch is only the start, and the features we've mentioned are only some of what's possible, and it's all intended use cases that the manufacturer will offer support on.
“Let us know if you want to see that” yeah like anyone doesn’t want to see that
I'd like to see it, but link aggregation hashing will make it very difficult to see it with a single file transfer. You'd need to have the server listening on multiple IPs and for each TCP stream to select a different interface on each end.
Aggregate two 100GbE ports? Of course I wanna see that!
And, by the way, gorgeous switch.
5:10 missed opportunity. “yeah, we’ve got one”
the verge pc build is so fucking quotable lmao
@@kquote03 yeah lol
RDMA: *exists*
Malware writers: "OH YEAH, HERE WE GO!"
@ When you don't understand
Edit: This is my most likes ever, tysm guys!
That's why RDMA should be local only for now... otherwise, wubba dub dub MFs
Yeah, DMA over network sounds really scary lol
Malware: "It's free real estate."
@ RDMA bypasses anti-virus as the packets go through the fpga instead of the cpu. Most antivirus only analyze what goes through the cpu. FPGAs are a blind spot in security right now.
1:14
The POINT to a fast network switch isn't a single machine to a single other machine file copy.
It's being able to do fast file transfers on 5 or 10 such copies AT THE SAME TIME from multiple different machines.
Unless you're plotting Chia at k35 or some such with a multi-GPU plotter, then it becomes transfers from one machine to multiple other machines.
Linus: "Let us know if you want to see that"
Us: "Do you even have to ask anymore??!?"
I want a girlfriend who talks about me the way Linus talks about his tech.
I want Linus as a girlfriend aswell
@@anonanon3066 So you're switch?
Same.
There is a channel called, Tech Deals, it's a husband and wife team, and I wouldn't say the wife is super techy, but her husband is, and when her husband starts waffling on about tech specs, you can see she is just WTF, but finds it cute!
th-cam.com/channels/Css3QxegBkF8BAetIo0qXA.html
nedry people need a wife now?
It’s really dope to see a creator that has become really successful but still geeks out like he did in his first videos.
" let us know if you want to see that "
YES LINUS. OF COURSE WE WANT TO SEE THAT
Linus: “We dipped to 2 gigabits!”
Me: Cry’s in KBs
shit same dude, took 7 minutes to upload an image one time lmao
@PaPBra Gaming it was a sarcasm comment!
Gigabytes!
*cries
Unless your cry is in kilobytes.
My data is only limited to 1bit/year :(
For those who have some difficulty understanding what they're doing...here an explanation!
LTT works on a centralised information infrastructure system...meaning that all projects are on a central system (server) and that editors will never have the project they're working on, on their computer. So with that in mind they need a very fast connection to that information (as they're working with huge files) and preferably a connection that doesn't put any cpu stress on the server or the local device (as the local device needs its cpu to digest the information and the server needs its cpu for operation/not crashing).
This solution accomplishes both...tbh I didn't know about the second functionality as well...thats why LTT is so DAMN interesting
How gentle he is with the fiber is so cute. As long as you don’t bend at a 180 and pinch it, it’ll be totally fine.
180 is straight bruh, probably more than 300 degrees.
@@cummingtonite691 if you’re holding a cable with and end going one direction and the other end the opposite, then bend it over 180 degrees, they are now going the same direction. Just don’t pinch it tight and you’re golden.
When your PC has less RAM than a freaking switch...
Edit: Don't even mention my router
And it's also cheaper than said switch too
r/usernamechecksout
@Zerg TV Wait.. why can I relate?
@UCJk-xZ-TGpRY474xPNhdN2g shut up
My router has 32gb ecc ram sodim and arm cpu core. My desktop is 16gb non ecc ram. Lol. Made here in melbourne Australia. Soooo good :)
Thing with Linus and his group is that not only they explore the next gen tech, they get to live that next gen tech almost immediately. I mean I am pretty sure, Linus will upgrade all his network with this and everyone there get to enjoy it.
I thought he was saying RDNA this whole time
What is he saying.....
@@kanishka.rathore RDMA
He isn’t!?!?!?
100Gbps file servers are the cure to COVID-19. The government doesn't want you to know that.
@@TRLTheRandomLab oo
Linux rules... I love these videos, in every other video "if we were in Linux, this would be amazing". And that is the truth.
@nils. Congratulations! I'm using Gentoo testing branch with LTO overlay and optimized to max. This on a laptop, which has it's own hardware and power saving challenges, I mean configuration isn't trivial.
I'm very grateful for Anthony! And also to Linus for showing Linux and talking about Linux. Though I certainly would hope more Linux content.
I migrated to 100% Linux user about 5 years ago, and from that point on my love and appreciation for Linux has grown every year. The more I learn, the better it gets.
Ah, my people have finally been recognised by the great LTT, thanks to Anthony.
No but seriously it's good that they're promoting Linux. If any demographic should try it out and see if it works for them, it's tech fans.
@nils. Haha, that's fair enough though. Once Linux is up and running, it generally won't change unless you change it: I can't imagine ElementaryOS force-changing his browser on him, or anything like that.
In that regard it's also friggin perfect for giving to people who aren't super techy. It rarely breaks for no reason, and they're getting no viruses on that thing.
As a network admin, this video makes me excited.
Anyone else nervous watching him one hand a $15,000 switch?
Jake "I think we have a warranty"
Me: there is NO WAY u DONT have a warranty
It's from eBay.
It's a Dell product. Probably the buyer always get upsold like 30 years of warranty without wanting it.
HOLY FRICK!!!! 94 LIKES!!!
@@GamesForNoobs Thats pretty good for a dumb comment!
I may be alone in this, but I think the aesthetics of the Thinkstation are on-point! Understated but still high-performance. You know it means business (both literally and figuratively).
If I had $20,000 for a PC, and I actually needed the power, I'd buy one of those puppies over a Mac any day.
"Theres only one way to see the transfer...." Are they going to show wireshark/tshark? "Resource Monitor!"
haha, I was thinking the same thing
Resource Monitor is the good shit.
Dude, some guys in the comments are talking about 100Gb "internet" speed and you expect LTT to show them "advanced" tools? Nah, they just wanna see numbers and comparisons...
i doubt you'd see it in *shark, as these packets are managed by the nic itself
Me: "What're you doing with all that expensive gear Linus?"
Linus: "I'm gonna speed it up!"
The upgradeable memory is likely to help with some of the other features the switch can do such as BGP
Linus looks like an Canadian Lumber Jack Nerd.
well he's two of those things
No yes all three. He secretly has a second job as a lumberjack. Shhhhh
@@lemonadegaming8865 Best comment, ever! xD
@@statostheman every canadian is skilled in chopping trees and playing hockey
@@bmxscape Also the finns. Finnish sauna is now on the unesco vault.
When The Write Speed of Your SSD Is Slower Than Your Internet.
These speeds are not indicative of internet speeds. Instead this is speeds from their storage servers to their work computers.
And I thought the 2GB/s my SSD can do was fast
This video isn’t even about his internet speed lol
This network interface is almost as fast as the data transfer speeds for system DRAM memory (latency is still probably far lower though)
This isn't internet speeds, they still only have 10gig internet in their office. The 100gig is for their LAN server.
You should use LACP to workstations to get 50 Gbps connections to everybody using two 25 Gbps links in parallel. That also provides link redundancy so you don't lose internet if only one fiber fails.
normal LAN: Pain in the butt
100Gb LAN: Pain in the money
Pain in the wallet
but it's not wifi... It's disk speed
Not internet. Link speed
My maximum speed on my plan is 25mb down and 2.5 up, it sucks. It’s not the worst but still bad and their is no other option
Still 10 Gbps internet.
Meanwhile in Madagascar we rely on fax for texting, Borat style.
That's really clever.
XD Marina ve ? Hehehe
(That's Malagasy for Is that true ?)
That's, kinda depressing actually. I hope one day all countries have easy access to computers and the internet. It's revolutionary technology.
@@netd3218 ok I won't watch it
@@netd3218 you do realize, that we can see the video without clicking on the link or upping your view counter. Plus, we can see what your recent comments are right? Lol.
Linus is the definition of the boss that wants his editors to work smarter not harder.
Removing bottlenecks so they don't have an excuse to take a break. Eventually they will be the bottleneck. Then AI editors will be introduced 🤔
Can’t wait for “we got a petabit networking”
probably not enuf fr there six 12k cameras footage
400gbe is the highest we have right now without delving into basically running a IX. blogs.cisco.com/datacenter/cisco-makes-terabit-scale-ethernet-networking-a-reality-with-400-gbe-technology
@@judgesh well you see it was a joke, but thank you
@@judgesh 800GbE is just around the corner (~1 year give or take) and then 1.6TbE should follow with that or not too long afterwards. I've seen some 32x 800GbE (2RU) switches teased as sampling already.
Rookie numbers, try petabyte.
Dell: this switch is $15000
Cisco: Do I look like a joke to you?
Yes. I can relate. Cisco's switches are crazy money. A similar cisco switch would cost at least $25k
My work places of the past have had 12,000+ cisco devices with uptimes on the matter of years less software upgrades that never went sideways. You are paying for a decade of trouble-free of packet moving and an army of people familiar with everything cisco. Dell bought their switch line by acquisition of Force 10. Force 10 had the problem they had a great product line but who skimps on DC switches that until very recently cost 10 -40 grand to populate with optics. The Dell switches appear to be fine gear and should be able to be discounted at 50-70% when purchased with Dell storage or Dell compute.
$15,000 for a switch is like nothing compared to other competitors....this is child's play. I've seen switches that cost 25,000-30,000 lol
@@christopherwhull It's the old adage, "Nobody has ever been fired for going with IBM", and you've been able to replace IBM with Cisco in that phrase for a decade now.
@@barsaf9989 make that $30-50k
All that space they have now, he should build a legit server room, 2 server racks and 2 network racks.
He dont need to go on workouts. He workout every day on his job, lifting up giant servers so they can fit in the camera.
That wasn't even the server, that was just a switch.
It's the part that takes in all the connections to the PCs and puts them through to the actual server in an orderly fashion.
The server racks are way, way crazier.
It must be really fun to work for a boss who thinks of tech as an investment and constantly upgrades their tech to make them more efficient, instead of bosses who think of tech as costs
I heard RDMA as RDNA and thought "What does Radeon have to do with any of this?"
A solid, engorged, YES on that double gigabit idea! DEW IT!
"If this video is so fast why is it loading slowly on my phone?"
Checkmate Linus.
You didn't connect the PHP through the SQL-protocol. Rookie mistake.
Just reroute the data as a vector constant in Java, it lets you smart access into a PCI backdoor instead.
Jake: be gentle.
Linus: 100gb BeNCHmArK!
8:15 [Subtitles On] Wont get better performance in Cinnabuns. Noted. Thanks
Next video: We bought submarine fiber cables to connect our computers!
"Technically everything is liquid-cooled because now we work underwater"
Thank you Linus for featuring us in your video!
8:00 "You can see here"
No.. no, the zoomed in shots weren't there, so we couldn't actually see.
"So this is hopefully, the last solutionthat we'll need to that problem." Famous last LTT words
....Until he implements 200 GbE or 400 GbE
I mean, right?! Give it two years and we'll be talking 500 GbE, maybe terabit even? Tech development is so incredibly fast these days.
7:55 Respect for using a G203 and not flexing on us with a Viper Ultimate or something.
Linus: and on linux we'd probably see full 100gb/s
me: well do it
Linus: ...
Honestly I wish he would have at least tried a live distro. Wouldn't surprise me if it's just full speed right out of the box without any extra software than a typical distro comes packaged with.
@@eideticex sometimes i think this Linus guy only manages to open 'Task manager' and put RAM sticks in motherboards.. He seems more a sales guy than a 'tech' guy xD
@@snekkel He originally worked in the sales department of NCIX afaik
hes scared of little ol linux for some unknown reason. Not shitting on windows since I use it daily but honestly hes a hype man and consumer.
he's pretty much become just a host now. its not worth his time learning to do those things, when he can pay others to do it instead. and u will probably see them testing the 100gbps transfer when they put another video, maybe 2 more, for the network aggregation and integration into their current setup.
Vodafone: We have 5G
Linus: Hold me sandals
Be careful if you start making your own optical network in the office. Touching the cable end with bare skin could introduce micgoglass in your blood stream. Optical cables are sneaky dangerous like that. Much more sneaky than the spiky biting copper cables.
Me: my 12 mb/s does good enough
Linus who sees 14gb/s
“YeAh NoT bAd”
what people tend to forget is that those are over the local network. *Not* to the internet. chances are you would theoreaticly easily reach 100 mb/s on your local network. (required your hardware, switch, router/modem, heck even cabels aren't a decade old.)
@@ERROR_-_404 well you see the problem is I pay for 30mb/s internet cuz I’m broke so yah. Funny you say that I upgraded to 500mb/s today
@@gh0stedone472 no you still don't get it. This is over the network. No internet involved. Just one PC to a one standing right beside it. Everyone and their dog has 1gbit at home because that has been standard for a decade and more.
😎😄👀😎Laughs with gigabit internet
970up 950down
Woohoo $70 4 life
I'm in ADSL2 so around 6 to 7.5 MB/s for me so ~ 55Mb/s, if you're not downloading a game it's more than fine tbh. It's only a problem if you have a roommate downloading stuff while you're playing esports titles lmao
25gig on OM3 cable huh?
But you are on the right track having 25gig / 100gig connectivity with RDMA. This will work really well.
You might want to look into managing your shares as a namespace so that you can have multiple different storage servers show up as one “big share”.
The 25 Gbits per second should hit the top at something about 3,125 Gbytes per second, of course RDMA should have some kind of overhead too, but that was freaking awesome anyway, need more of this content, time for a try on remake of the all flash array.
Linus: Smiles, " Realistically, probably not."
Me: Yep, still jealous.
Tucker Budzyn?🤗❤️
17:02 Uh oh, Linus says "The Final Solution."
Started new job recently and as part of our core network we have switches with 100GB access ports and 400GB uplink ports which just blew my mind
2030: We get 10TB Networking!.. HOLY $H!T
@@mahmutayabak6885 what
You ment 2022
jpnewpic88.men
We need Linus Tech Tips: The MOVIE 🍿!
....We already have The Roast of Linus Sebastian and that was already kind of meh. What are they going to do for a movie lmao
I love these oldschool tech videos... This is Linus being believably excited again...
imagine having this in lebanon while we out here having 0.7Mbps
100%
I’m in the Uk with those speeds LOL
@@muridalcars lemme guess, a fellow sky user
Same here in France 😢
This has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with internet speeds. This is to connect the editors to the video storage server with more bandwidth so they can edit more efficiently. They 'only' have 5GBIT internet, so 10GBE is plenty for the internet connection alone.
1:46 "So, any kind of practical high-speed deployment starts with the switch."
My brain out of nowhere: *Nintendo Switch click sfx*
12:26 JUST SEND IT( we doing black flips over huge gaps or hitting the kicker ramp?) AWESOME
linus 2013: 50MBIT PER SECOND SO FAST GO BRR
linus 2020: 100gbit, y a w n
@@netd3218 bot