I'm a computer science student and was able to convince a CDN who has a NOC locally to give me a tour of their facility this last Monday. I thought it was great and might consider network engineering in the future. But I think I'd rather be programming the utilities that run and operate these networks.

Either way, I would love to play with some fiber optics networking. Create an in-house network between machines on different platforms and program them to do stupid things. I'm in a Networking Research lab this summer, but am an undergrad and have a lot to learn about networking. I know equipment is expensive, so that's my problem. I know Cat6 offers similar speeds, but I wanna play with fiber as I believe that's where our future is. Or.. am I wrong?

The University has a public auction on Tuesday and I'll see if I can find anything there. My highest hopes are to at least find some old 10/100MB switches, routers, servers.

Thanks in advance!

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Sorry, gonna go ask this on Server Fault. – Kevin Jul 15 '09 at 23:59
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Fiber is just the cable, if you really care about fiber, you should do signal processing as part of an Electrical Engineering degree.

If you care about networking as you say, then fiber or cat5/6 are just the 'wire' that carry signal. You shouldn't worry about how they did it, other than they do.

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Right right, but fiber's so much cooler... ;) I'll probably end up with nothing near it and will be completely satisfied experimenting with 10 megabit switches, 400Mhz servers and whatever ethernet I have laying around. – Kevin Jul 16 '09 at 0:10
Oh, c'mon. Gigabit NICs and consumer-grade switches are not that expensive. Check out newegg and you local bestbuy. Though running on a slow network brings its own set of interesting issues :) – Nikolai N Fetissov Nov 19 '09 at 22:10
@Nikolai: Nobody saying don't use gigabit NICs. I was just pointing out that for most people there is not benefit of optical solutions verse CAT5e/6 (At any speed 1,10,100 or 1000Mbit). – Simeon Pilgrim Nov 19 '09 at 22:46
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