I'll have to disagree with my esteemed colleague @
sebastiantombs. In 1980, 1990, early 2000 10/100 Mb was more than enough for the bandwidth and current standards of the technology of the day. In 2021 when the market has 1GB switches from every major vendor to 2nd tier in every price range to suite almost any tight budget.
Never mind the used market from the likes of eBay for Enterprise hardware.
It makes very little sense to purchase a switch that will be a bottle neck in the future. Buy once, cry once, and never have to worry about spending more money on something that is critical to the network infrastructure. Even worse none of these switches are managed switches which offer VLAN or any other security features to hardened the network. The most glaring problems with these 3rd tier POE switches are their under powered PSU's.
Anyone who can do basic math will quickly note the numbers that are stated do NOT correlate to real world use.
The first POE switch indicates 16 ports @200 watts. Yet in the same breath it states 30 watts per port??? Impossible, 200 / 16 = 12.5 watts which is a POE AF standard not POE AT. What this switch does like all the of cheap 3rd tier switches is SHARE the power between the PSU.
The other POE switch indicates 24 ports @250 watts. Yet again in the same breath it states 30 watts per port and actually indicates AF / AT. 250 / 24 = 10.41 watts?!?!
If you have a small system this switch may very well offer you a good value in the short term. The day you decide to hook up more demanding hardware that comes even close to 15 watts that thing will light on fire. Which you should ask does this appliance have any UL / cUL safety rating / listing???
Does the unit have any fans inside the case???
No???
All that heat is going to be expelled and cooled down how???
One may use a power brick vs other incorporates a internal PSU. The one that uses a power brick you better place it on / in a fire rated container . . .