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Forum Discussion

preissler's avatar
preissler
Aspirant
May 26, 2025

Product state of GS116E

Hi,

 

I am trying to determine whether the Ethernet switch GS116E is still supported or has reached the end of its product cycle. The NETGEAR product pages provide conflicting information. The German product page indicates that the switch has reached end-of-life status, while the English product page does not mention this, suggesting that support is still available.

 

Which of the two pages is correct?

 

 

German product page: https://www.netgear.com/support/product/gs116e/

Englisch product page: https://www.netgear.com/de/support/product/gs116e/

 

Thanks in advanced!

4 Replies

  • EOS doesn't mean the device stops working, just that it stops getting updates. So it'll still work fine. 

    Are you having an issue with it? 

  • Yes, I know that the device still works with EOS in principle. :-)
    I have no problems with the switch - it works perfectly.


    In my company, we are currently evaluating an internal network in terms of cyber security. One of the tasks is to take stock of the network components currently in use. Among other things, I have to clarify whether the network devices have the latest firmware offered by the manufacturer and whether the manufacturer still provides firmware support if a security gap is found in the firmware in the future.
    This is where my interest in the product status comes in.

  • Hallo preissler​ 

     

    https://www.netgear.com/about/eos/ is the more formal list, but I admit (being not Netgear, just a customer and market observator) it might be again not fully up to speed. While the GS116E models are certainly EOL for a longer time: 

     

    GS116E GS116E-200UKS 9/1/21
    GS116E GS116E-200AUS 11/1/21
    GS116E GS116E-200JPS 11/1/21
    GS116E GS116E-200NAS 11/1/21
    GS116E GS116E-200PES 11/1/21
    GS116E GS116E-200PRS 11/1/21

     

    GS116E-200xxx means these a GS116Ev2 models, no idea if there ever were v1 versions.

     

    When you are expecting a long term software and firmware maitenance, there is no other way than abandon these low-cost commoddity switches (Netgear-Unmanaged, -Plus, and -Smart Managed Switches).

     

    Warranty for products with ProSAFE Limited Lifetime Warranty, except for Fully Managed Switches, ends five years after the product is listed as NETGEAR Business Products "End of Life" or EOL here. Fully Managed Switches https://www.netgear.com/business/products/switches/managed/ are warranted for their lifetime, as long as the original bona fide end user continues to own or use the product - these also come with free lifetime support on the defined support channels.

     

    To compare: Keep in mind, in the IT industry you usually have to sign and pay for an expensive software maintenance and support contract, in the range of 15...20% of the official price - annually. 

     

    Extremely generous warryanty polices in fact what Netgear offers in general.

     

    Also keep in mind that certain Switch Model Series like eg, the GS3xx[xxx] are priced for some low-cost retail chains (mostly US), but also offered at the same competitive costs in the channel. The warranty terms can differ there, depending on the market. In CN it's one year, in all other markets these two years.

     

    Grüsse aus der Schweiz!

    -Kurt.

     

     

    • StephenB's avatar
      StephenB
      Guru
      schumaku wrote:

      GS116E-200xxx means these a GS116Ev2 models, no idea if there ever were v1 versions.

      FWIW, there were. You can select the older model on both the English and German support pages that preissler​ linked.

       

      The English page correctly has the v2 listed as End of Life, the inconsistency is when you choose the original version. The v1 firmware was last updated in 2013, so it clearly is also end of life.

       

      I've tried to alert Netgear to the inconsistency preissler​ found and also pointing out that the v1 is missing from the "full" EOL list.  No idea if they will fix them or not.

       

       

      Lots of Netgear switches have multiple hardware versions (at leat one has a v5), so you do need to take the -XXX suffix into account when you are figuring out which are end-of-life.

       

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