IOGEAR 8 Port Video Splitter GVS98

  • Product Code: V0016039
  • Manufacturers #: GVS98
  • Availability: Unavailable
  • £39.91 ex VAT
IOGEAR 8 Port Video Splitter GVS98 Manufacturers Logo

Description

The Video Splitter is a signal booster and splitter that is used to take video input from a single source and direct it to eight video outputs for monitors using analog signals. The signal boost obtained by using the GVS98 allows you to not only split the signal but to extend the distance so that you can send the signal to about 215 feet away. This is no small feat, your average VGA card, over a standard VGA cable, sends a clear VGA signal approximately 25 feet. Dividing this between other displays reduces the video quality. This is why IOGEAR's video splitters are the best choice for allowing you to carry and split the video signal to more that one display with the same quality as the original signal.

Bandwidth is the term that is used to describe the signal capacity of these units. In general, bandwidth is directly proportional to the amount of data transmitted per unit of time. Specifically, in analog signals, bandwidth is the difference between the highest-frequency and the lowest frequency components of a givin signal. For example a voice telephone signal has a bandwidth of 3000 Hz (or 3000 cycles per second), where an analog TV signal has a bandwidth of approximately 6MHz (or 6 million cycles per second) which is approximately 2000 times greater than a simple voice phone call. These units have a bandwidth of 200MHz (which is 150 million cycles per second) and that is 25 times greater than a simple TV signal. The high bandwidth allows for the transmission of large amounts of information at a very high rate of speed, thus allowing for the use of high resolution settings upwards of 1792 x 1344 in 24 or 32 bit true color mode at a refresh rate of 60Hz.

IOGEAR 8 Port Video Splitter GVS98 - Video splitter - 8 ports

Basic Specifications

Basic Specifications. See the Extended Specifications tab for extra details
Manufacturer's Part Number: GVS98
Weight: 0.5kg
Product Description: IOGEAR 8 Port Video Splitter GVS98 - video splitter - 8 ports
Device Type: Video splitter
Form Factor: External
Dimensions (WxDxH): 7.6 cm x 19.7 cm x 3.8 cm
Weight: 0.5 kg
Ports Qty: 8
Manufacturer Warranty: 3 years warranty

Specifications

Basic Specifications
Manufacturer's Part Number: GVS98
Weight: 0.5kg
Product Description IOGEAR 8 Port Video Splitter GVS98 - video splitter - 8 ports
Device Type Video splitter
Form Factor External
Dimensions (WxDxH) 7.6 cm x 19.7 cm x 3.8 cm
Weight 0.5 kg
Ports Qty 8
Manufacturer Warranty 3 years warranty
General
Device Type Video splitter
Enclosure Type External
Width 7.6 cm
Depth 19.7 cm
Height 3.8 cm
Weight 0.5 kg
Networking
Ports Qty 8
Connectivity Technology Wired
KVM
Max Resolution 1792 x 1344 60 Hz
Max Video Bandwidth 200 MHz
Expansion / Connectivity
Interfaces 8 x display / video - VGA - 15 pin HD D-Sub (HD-15)
Connections 1 x display / video - VGA - 15 pin HD D-Sub (HD-15)
Power
Power Device Power adapter - external
Power Consumption Operational 3.42 Watt
Manufacturer Warranty
Service & Support 3 years warranty
Service & Support Details Limited warranty - 3 years
Environmental Parameters
Min Operating Temperature 5 °C
Max Operating Temperature 40 °C
Humidity Range Operating 0 - 80%

Jargon

ADSL

ADSL is short for Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line. It is a networking technology that, like the older dial up modem technology that proceeded it, works over standard telephone lines. Unlike modems, it is completely digital and offers broadband class performance. It also doesn't require you to dial a number to connect to a remote computer and is an "always on" system. Additionally, it still allows the telephone line to be used for voice calls even when the ADSL connection is in use.

The service is asymmetric, meaning that the rate you can send information is different from the rate at which you can receive it. In almost all cases you can receive at a faster rate than you can send because domestic internet use tends to involve far more downloading than uploading.

Bandwidth

A measure of performance for a network connection. It can also be referred to as bit rate, data rate, or baud rate, and is measured in bits per second, kilobits (thousands of bits) per second or megabits (millions of bits) per second.

Data rate

See Bandwidth

Ethernet

Ethernet is the standard computer networking technology, used today in nearly all forms of computer networking. It comes in two main forms, wired Ethernet using cables similar to telephone cable to connect computers and and network devices, and wireless Ethernet which uses radio signals to transmit data over short ranges. Ethernet has been around for a long time and has evolved over the years, but most versions of wired ethernet use the same style of connector and are broadly compatible (though all devices on a particular section of a network can only communicate at the speed of the slowest node on the network). Very old versions of Ethernet use a different cable and connector and are not compatible with current versions without adaptors.

Firewall

A firewall is a hardware device or a piece of software that monitors and limits access between a computer and the network it is attached to. Software firewalls are normally used to protect a personal PC from malicious access attempts, while a hardware firewall can also be used to limit the attached computer's ability to access internet services. This should not be confused with web filtering software, which is intended to limit a computer's ability to access individual or classes of sites.

Firewalls are considered a vital line of defence for computers connected to the internet, and no computer should be put online without a firewall to protect it. Many routers also incorporate a firewall.

Hz, (Khz, MHz, GHz)

Hz is short for Hertz, a measure of cycles per second. Khz, MHz, and GHz are short for KiloHertz, MegaHertz and GigaHertz respectively. These terms are used to express the frequency of an electronic or radio signal, for example wireless networking systems work in a 2.4 GHz radio frequency range.

Interface

How a computer interconnects with the network it is attached to. The interfaces typically in use today are wired over ethernet cabling, or wireless using one of the 802.11 wireless networking standards.

Infrared Communication

IrDA (Infrared Data Association) is a wireless networking standard based on infra red light, similar to television remote controls. It is a short range system that requires a direct line of sight between the communicating devices. It is popular on mobile phones, PDAs and other portable equipment.

ISDN

ISDN is short for Intergrated Services Digital Network. It was a precursor to ADSL. Like ADSL it provided a way of using standard telephone lines to transmit digital data, provided an always-on capability and allowed voice and data communication at the same time. It was, however, considerably slower and more expensive to install and run than ADSL. ISDN is considered a legacy standard today and has mostly been supersceded by ADSL and Cable internet access.

LAN

LAN stands for Local Area Network. While the term "Local Area" is not well defined, it tends to describe a network that covers a single room or a single building. LANs are built using Ethernet (either using wired or wireless interfaces) and allow several computers to exchange email with other machines on the LAN and share files and resources such as laser printers or internet access. There is some overlap between the concepts of LANs and Intranet, though an Intranet can cover a much wider area and tends to be confined to an organization rather than a physical location.

Mbps

See Bandwidth

Network

The connecting of two or more computers together in order to exchange data and share resources. A network can range from two computers connected by a cable all the way up to the global internet.

Parallel transmission

A data transmission method where several bits are transmitted simultaneously along several conductors running in parallel to each other. The video (VGA or DVI) connector on your computer is a good example of a parallel transmission system.

PPTP

Point to Point Tunnelling Protocol (PPTP) is a protocol that allows corporations to extend their own corporate networks through private secure "tunnels" over the public internet. It is therefore a protocol for enabling the establishment of Virtual Private Networks.

Routing Protocol

A routing protocol is a protocol that specifies how routers communicate with each other to disseminate information that allows them to select routes between any two nodes on a computer network (while the choice of the route is done by routing algorithms). Typically, each router has a priori knowledge only of its directly attached networks. A routing protocol shares this information successively, first among immediate neighbours and then throughout the entire network. This way routers can gain knowledge of the network topology at large. This process happens entirely automatically, and allows internet traffic to route itself around damaged or degraded parts of the internet.

Serial Transmission

A data transmission method where data is transmitted as a stream of bits, one bit at a time along a single conductor or other transmission media. This has advantages over parallel transmission as the single data channel is cheaper than the multiple data channels of parallel systems, and several synchronization problems that can occur in parallel transmission systems are avoided in serial. USB and wired ethernet are examples of serial transmission systems.

Tunnelling

Tunnelling is the process that allows for the sending of network traffic that needs to be secure over an untrusted network, such as the public internet. The tunnel provides a secure encrypted connection between two computers in order to allow unencrypted traffic of a different type to be transmitted safely across the connection. For example, the Windows File and Printer Sharing protocol does not support encryption and is therefore insecure, but if you use a tunnel then you can safely use this service without fear of your network traffic being intercepted. Tunnelling allows for Virtual Private Networks to be deployed over public networks.

Virtual Private Network

A Virtual Private Network (VPN) is a private network between computers where some or all of the nodes in the network are connected using an open public network, such as the public internet. However, all communication between these computers remains private because it runs over a secure encrypted tunnel, meaning that traffic on the network cannot be intercepted by other machines on the network that are not part of the VPN. While the physical network that connects the machines is public, the virtual network that exists between them is private because the traffic is unreadable to any computer that is not part of the VPN.