Yes. The connectors have different lengths, as some are internal and some are external interfaces, both of which are part of the chain in transferring data from storage device in one host to a storage device in another host. The point was to illustrate the bottleneck among all of the possible pieces in that chain, standard 1GbE ethernet is lagging behind. That's why I specifically referenced NVMe and 2/4Lane implementations when talking PCIe. In this context, run length is entirely irrelevant. It's more relevant to point out that you can network Ethernet connections, meanwhile USB, thunderbolt and Wifi are primarily client <> host connections.
> You can get a budget SFP+ Switch and 2 NICs for ~$300.
Yes, this is part of the problem. In 2016's we started to see mainstream adoption of 10G, which hopefully would lead to the more availabile, more affordable, consumer friendly ease of use twisted pair Cat6a and RJ45 10Gbase-T Switches. Instead, Enterprise had already largely moved on from 10G (largely supporting it as a legacy connector via SFP28 being backwards compatible with SFP+) and Mainstream/Prosumer manufacturers instead decided to regress from the 10Gbase-T deployments to 2.5GbE.
As a result we're not seeing a lot of development in the 10G space, and in many ways a regression towards 2.5GbE. Sure, if you don't mind the noise and know your way around a cli, there are plenty of surplus enterprise switches on the cheap. And I don't mind Optics/DACs. I run 10G at home (cat6a, Intel X550's, Arista 7050T-64, which used to be a few hundred bucks) and 25G/100G in the lab (CX4 LX's/CX6 VPIs connected to an Arista 7260CX-64). But it is unfamiliar to most consumers. Not a huge hurdle, but a strange ask considering 10Gbase-T with familiar twisted pair and rj45 aint new by any means. Mikrotik and UBQT both have some options in the space, but the cost of these newer switches certainly doesn't fall in the $300 budget, unless you only need like 2-4 10G ports on the switch and are fine with SFP+. And yes, >4PHY 10G SFP+ and/or 10Gbase-t switches exist, but you're not getting them and NICs w/ DACs (or especially fiber if you need a longer run akin to a standard Cat5 deployment) inside your $300 budget, and there's very few on the market that'll fit in your budget even if you stretch it to $500.
TL;DR: Yes, 10G is technically available, but it's a strangely esoteric niche that exists after the mainstream decided to regress from 10GbE towards 2.5GbE.
> You can get a budget SFP+ Switch and 2 NICs for ~$300.
Yes, this is part of the problem. In 2016's we started to see mainstream adoption of 10G, which hopefully would lead to the more availabile, more affordable, consumer friendly ease of use twisted pair Cat6a and RJ45 10Gbase-T Switches. Instead, Enterprise had already largely moved on from 10G (largely supporting it as a legacy connector via SFP28 being backwards compatible with SFP+) and Mainstream/Prosumer manufacturers instead decided to regress from the 10Gbase-T deployments to 2.5GbE.
As a result we're not seeing a lot of development in the 10G space, and in many ways a regression towards 2.5GbE. Sure, if you don't mind the noise and know your way around a cli, there are plenty of surplus enterprise switches on the cheap. And I don't mind Optics/DACs. I run 10G at home (cat6a, Intel X550's, Arista 7050T-64, which used to be a few hundred bucks) and 25G/100G in the lab (CX4 LX's/CX6 VPIs connected to an Arista 7260CX-64). But it is unfamiliar to most consumers. Not a huge hurdle, but a strange ask considering 10Gbase-T with familiar twisted pair and rj45 aint new by any means. Mikrotik and UBQT both have some options in the space, but the cost of these newer switches certainly doesn't fall in the $300 budget, unless you only need like 2-4 10G ports on the switch and are fine with SFP+. And yes, >4PHY 10G SFP+ and/or 10Gbase-t switches exist, but you're not getting them and NICs w/ DACs (or especially fiber if you need a longer run akin to a standard Cat5 deployment) inside your $300 budget, and there's very few on the market that'll fit in your budget even if you stretch it to $500.
TL;DR: Yes, 10G is technically available, but it's a strangely esoteric niche that exists after the mainstream decided to regress from 10GbE towards 2.5GbE.