Ethernet/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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==Other related topics== | ==Other related topics== | ||
==Articles related by keyphrases (Bot populated)== | |||
{{r|Medium access control}} | |||
{{r|Point of presence}} | |||
{{r|Network topology}} | |||
{{r|IEEE Project 802}} | |||
{{r|Computer networking media sharing protocols}} | |||
{{r|Point-to-Point Protocol}} |
Latest revision as of 16:01, 13 August 2024
- See also changes related to Ethernet, or pages that link to Ethernet or to this page or whose text contains "Ethernet".
Parent topics
- Local area network [r]: A range of techniques for interconnecting multiple computers, over physical media such as wire or over wireless radio, within a limited geographic area, typically multiples of 100 meters. [e]
- Medium access control [r]: The set of protocols and administrative conventions that let multiple computers or communications devices share a common network medium, usually referring to a local area network medium, but also an area of radio communications on a given part of the electromagnetic spectrum [e]
- Physical layer protocol [r]: A mechanical, and electrical or optical, specification that defines the connection between a computer and the transmission medium, aspects or all details of the transmission medium, or both [e]
- Digital Equipment Corporation [r]: Once the #2 company in the computer industry, now defunct; pioneered the minicomputer and much of networking, but dismissed the significance of the personal computer [e]
- Intel [r]: A major manufacturer of integrated circuit chips, especially processors. [e]
- Xerox [r]: Add brief definition or description
Subtopics
- IEEE Project 802 [r]: The main standards body, with many working groups, that specifies technical standards for wired and wireless local area networks, with ranges up to tens of kilometers [e]
- IEEE 802.3 [r]: The primary standards body for evolved ethernet over physical media protocols. [e]
- Fast Ethernet [r]: Formally specified as IEEE 802.3u; first speed improvement over the original Ethernet 10 Mbps speed developed by the IEEE 802.3 project, operating at a nominal 100 Mbps speed; now the default speed of most PC interfaces although Gigabit Ethernet is increasingly common; autonegotiation to 10/100 speed is very widespread [e]
- Gigabit Ethernet [r]: Generic term for IEEE 802.3 operation at a nominal data rate of 1 Gbps; includes IEEE 802.3z operating over optical fiber and IEEE 802.3ab over twisted pair [e]
- 10 Gigabit Ethernet [r]: Add brief definition or description
- 40 Gigabit Ethernet [r]: Add brief definition or description
- 100 Gigabit Ethernet [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Remote Direct Memory Access over Converged Ethernet [r]: (RoCE, pronounced Rocky) high performance computing (HPC) architecture, which layers Infiniband on top of the physical and data link layers of IEEE 802.3, but replaces the TCP/IP end-to-end and routing protocols with their InfiniBand equivalents. [e]
- Medium access control [r]: The set of protocols and administrative conventions that let multiple computers or communications devices share a common network medium, usually referring to a local area network medium, but also an area of radio communications on a given part of the electromagnetic spectrum [e]
- Point of presence [r]: In telecommunications and computer networking, a location at which service providers can connect to one another, or where customers may connect to their service providers [e]
- Network topology [r]: Defines the method in which a computer network is architected; topologies can be either physical (meaning how the actual hardware is interconnected) or logical (meaning how that network is implemented by protocols in software) [e]
- IEEE Project 802 [r]: The main standards body, with many working groups, that specifies technical standards for wired and wireless local area networks, with ranges up to tens of kilometers [e]
- Computer networking media sharing protocols [r]: Add brief definition or description
- Point-to-Point Protocol [r]: A very flexible protocol for running data over a wide range of media, which use a logical point-to-point topology [e]