I really do get humored in a good way by people when they're adamant about something.
Fact is the TIA/EIA 568-B1 standard specifies that Cat5e carries up to a 100MHz carrier frequency. There are 5e cables that do far exceed the required "megahertz" for 5e - but it isn't necessary for proper gigabit operation. The standard also specifies how 10/100/1000 connections via a 5e cable work. It's completley capable of full duplex at all speeds. As many of us has indicated, we use 5e cabling with gigabit ethernet every day without fail. A simple Google search (for a site OTHER than wikipedia, [exploitive deleted] bless its soul) will return and verify all of this info.
In v_lestat's defense, the truth is anyone who is going to be buying bulk cable these days should be moving on to Cat6 or even Cat7 to future-proof yourself in an office or industrial area. Any good salesman should pitch Cat6/7 to a potential customer, I agree 100%. Though claiming Cat5/5e can't reliably do gigabit is contrary to published standard.
One last note, Cat6 was designed to do 10Gbit over copper while maintaining backward compatibility...
Edit: Hey D-Link Guys.. above I said ".. site other than wikipedia G o d bless its soul" and it got [exploitive deleted] .. that wasn't an
expletive .. and it's spelled wrong.
