If you stream music from the internet, I can't recommend this more highly


I had been using a Roon Nucleus to stream Qobuz, with my Chord Qutest directly connected to the Nucleus. I thought I was getting pretty decent sound quality. And then I got a marketing email from Small Green Computer touting some of their optical gear. The basic idea is that normal cables and connections used to stream from the internet pick up noise of one kind or another (radio frequencies and electromagnetic something or other). But fiber optic cables and their connections/interfaces do not. I don’t know anything about anything, but it made theoretical sense to me, it wasn’t a huge amount of money ($1,400), and with a 30 day return policy I figured I could always return it if I didn’t hear any improvement. Well, I didn’t just hear a slight improvement; it was like turning on the lights in a dark room. Much greater clarity and detail, much better micro and macro dynamics, better timbre to acoustic instruments -- overall just more lifelike. Two quick examples: I’ve listened to some of Steely Dan’s top songs 100s of times over the course of my life, and this is the first time I’d ever noticed a particular and very subtle sound characteristic of Fagen’s keyboard in Babylon Sister. It’s hard to describe, but it’s like there’s a slight sound of air being exhaled by it. The other example: the specific timbre of whatever percussive instrument is used at the beginning of Copeland’s "Fanfare for the Common Man" (a recording by the Minnesota Orchestra). There’s more of a metallic sound than a drum skin sound to it that I didn’t know was there before. The metallic sound starts in the center and then projects out and to the sides, like a wave washing over you. Anyway, I’m just thrilled about having stumbled upon the whole "optical" thing and felt obligated to let others know about it. If you stream music over the internet, I highly recommend giving it a try. (The product I got was the opticalRendu, with the linear power supply option, and the Fiber Ethernet Converter Bundle option.)
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niodari, my experience is that Toslink is poorer as a link in comparison to digital coax. There may be exceptions, but I have not encountered any yet. The discussion on upgrade here is conversion from ethernet to optical. I would not make the mistake of thinking that because the Toslink is inferior to your DAC, it would not be efficacious to use optical connection in eliminating noise/improving the playback by replacing Ethernet. I wrote the article the OP is referencing in regard to the SMC/SONORE products, and discourage people from the conclusion that these two implementations of fiber optic result in similar outcomes. 

I also encourage people to listen to those who have done demo, owned and/or compared.

It's interesting that Lumin may be onto something with their X1 DAC/Streamer as it has a native fiber connection in addition to the copper Ethernet (RJ45) connection. I've heard and read from X1 owners that the fiber optic port is noticeably better than the copper Ethernet port.
In addition to my dCS DAC/Streamer I have a NAS for ripped music. Like the dCS Rossini DAC, the NAS is connected to a UniFi switch via a 6' Melco Ethernet cable. 
My question is would I need an additional fiber optic setup between the NAS and UniFi switch or would the fiber optic setup between the UniFi switch and the dCS Rossini take care of any electrical noise interference when listening to ripped music from the NAS?
It is my understanding optical/fiber decoupling is best positioned as close to the endpoint as possible.  I am currently using two  TP-Link Gigabit SFP to RJ45 Fiber Media Converters and a 1M run of Multimode Duplex Fiber Optic Cable.  These are positioned after a Silent Angel Bonn N8 Ethernet network switch and just in front of my Antipodes server to eliminate EMI/RFI that may potentially be contaminating the approximately 30 feet run of Ethernet from my router to my server.  
One question I have considered is whether I would be better off placing one of my TP Link fibre/Ethernet converters at my router, and then the second just in front of my server so I could run 30 feet of  duplex fiber optic cable in place of the current Ethernet cable?  BTW, 10M of fiber optic cable only costs about $12.
Another question I have is why does it cost thousands of dollars to implement these options (i.e., the Sonore products)?  TP-Link Gigabit SFP to RJ45 Fiber Media Converters cost about $20 bucks, the fiber duplex cables are inexpensive, and you can purchase a 1 foot Cat 8 cable for $6 bucks that you can use to make final connections to your router, switch, server, and/or endpoint.  I get that having that optical connection inside the device may be a slightly superior solution, but is the trade-off of not needing a 1 to 3-foot Ethernet cable at the end of your signal chain really worth thousands?
For $12, I think I will try running fiber optic cable instead of Ethernet for my longest connection.