There are some considerations. Length, proximity to other things (power and the like, especially if running in parallel) and the terminations themselves. For me, it’s cabling that was installed throughout the house during its build. I don’t have an exact distance, but it’s approximately 30 ft with a largish margin for error there. I’ve gotten a full GB of throughput when my NAS works the way it should. It’s an Aquantia 107 NIC onboard Asus Zenith II Extreme with all Unifi switches in the middle and a FS copper SFP towards the PC. Fiber between the server and switches.while some people here managed running 10Gig over cat5e; I have not managed to get more than ~500MB/s (nvme -to- arc2 cache). Just changing it to cat6 cable made it run at 880MB/s (cat7 cable actually got me 1240MB/s). Still not great... bad exp with copper for me. (I didn't cheap out on the cables either.)
Fiber got me solid 1200MB/s on same system/setup.
I used it with QNAP QSW-M408-4C, and i did try to tune things.
Based on what? Every new office I’ve been a part of will do both. Wired security is no different than wireless in that you have centralized controls over the clients that connect. The method by which they connect doesn’t matter. But as this is a home solution, that’s neither here nor there.That's correct. Most of the companies are actually moving to provide better wifi and stop investing on the lan connection. Wifi also has better security solutions.