Had to get a new switch last week as I ran out of ports on my router.
I've already got a Netgear 5 Port GigE switch upstairs, but they are still quite expensive.
Saw this TP-Link one on ebuyer:
http://www.ebuyer.com/259805-tp-link-tl-sg1005d-5-port-gigabit-switch-10-100-1000m-desktop-tl-sg1005d
TP-Link TL-SG1005D 5-port Gigabit Switch Product Description
The TL-SG1005D 5-port Gigabit Ethernet Switch provides you with a high-performance, low-cost, easy-to-use, seamless and standard upgrade to improve old network to 1000Mbps network. Increase the speed of your network server and backbone connections, or make Gigabit to the desktop a reality. Power users in the home, office, workgroup, or creative production environment can now move large, bandwidth-intensive files faster. Transfer graphics, CGI, CAD, or multimedia files and other applications that have to move large files across the network almost instantly.
Featured with 5 10/100/1000Mbps ports, TL-SG1005D greatly expands your network capacity, enabling instant large files transferring. So, power users in the home, office, workgroup, or creative production environment can now move large, bandwidth-intensive files faster. Transfer graphics, CGI, CAD, or multimedia files across the network instantly.
Innovative energy-efficient technology saves power up to 70%
Supports IEEE 802.3x flow control for Full Duplex mode and backpressure for Half Duplex mode
Non-blocking switching architecture that forwards and filters packets at full wire-speed for maximum throughput
16Gbps Switching Capacity
9K Jumbo frame improves performance of large data transfers
Auto-MDI/MDIX eliminates the need for crossover cables
Supports MAC address auto-learning and auto-aging
Auto-negotiation ports provide smart integration between 10Mbps, 100Mbps and 1000Mbps hardware
Fanless design ensures quiet operation
Desktop or wall-mounting design
Plug and Play design simplifies installation
Can't fault it for the money. Got my PS3, XBOX, Sky HD and my Netgear Powerline which connects upstairs into it, leaving two spare ports on the router.