Hey everyone,
Thanks for all the responses. Once again, you all have indulged me and I am very appreciative. I'll try to respond to everyone.
First, I think the general idea I am getting here is that while, yes, one could learn electronics through the troubleshooting and repair of parts, complicated systems are complicated. I don't know many things and I even don't know what I don't know. Can I do it? Sure. Is it going to take a LONG time, yes.

Second, talking about the Netgear in particular. I angled my post as a more general Can You Learn In This Way, but many of you made specific suggestions and I did some further tests.
This switch is dead after probably one or more surges. A Comcast modem also bit the dust during the same incident.
There are six pins on the female portion of the power connector. Three are ground. Three are +5VDC. Powering up the entire switch does not change that output as kxenos asked me to check. I don't have a PSU that I can use to increase the amps. I haven't gotten anything that sophisticated yet. FWIW: The output listed on the power adapter is 5v 8a.
I can measure 5vdc along much of the upper left of the board. There seemed to be a coloring to the mask in which one part is +5 and one is ground. The coloring reaches a series of ... capacitors I believe (they're all listed as "C##" on the board) around an Intel chip which, I believe is the flash memory. I don't know if this means that the flash memory is powered first or something in run from flash. (I honestly don't know much about the chip or about how chips are powered and code is run from one.)
I am pretty sure that this is the datasheet for the Intel chip:
http://www-mtl.mit.edu/Courses/6.111/labkit/datasheets/28F128J3A.pdfI see a lot of items on the board listed as TP which, if it's anything like pinball PCBs are test points. The problem, though, is that I don't know what I am supposed to be reading on these TPs. Most of them around the exposed ICs (meaning the ones that don't have heat sinks) show 0.0v. Some of them, especially right below the capacitors and on the right side of that Intel chip show 0.25vdc. I don't know what that means, though.
Rerouter, I'm hoping you can give me more step-by-step instructions to look for that ripple you're referring to. The DC voltage is 5, wouldn't the AC be 110v?
I am going to look for a console, Crazy Ape. Good idea.
There are many things on the board that I don't know how to identify. For instance, there are a few vertical-standing donut-shaped items in which copper wire goes in and around them.
I wish I had a working sample, Galaxywise. That would be awesome. ;-)
Thanks again, everyone!
