arcnet

listen to the pronunciation of arcnet
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A 2 5 megabit per second baseband, token-passing network designed by Datapoint Corporation that supports up to 255 nodes
A LAN implementation developed by Datapoint that uses a token-passing discipline operating over a 2 5 Mbps physical network Arcnet became popular in implementing early PC networks because it offered a reasonable level of performance at a reasonable price Arcnet can be implemented in many topologies, but it is usually implemented as a star
Attached Resource Computing Network, developed by Datapoint Corporation, and standardized under IEEE 878 1 A token-passing protocol, in which the token is passed to the computer with the next highest address, not the one physically next in the ring
A 2 5 Mbps baseband, token-passing network, designed by Datapoint Corporation, that supports up to 255 nodes
Short for Attached Resource Computer network, ARCnet is one of the oldest, simplest, and least expensive types of local-area network(LAN) ARCnet was introduced by Datapoint Corporation in 1968 It uses a token-ring architecture, supports data rates of 2 5 Mbps, and connects up to 255 computers A special advantage of ARCnet is that it permits various types of transmission media -- twisted-pair wire, coaxial cable, and fiber optic cable -- to be mixed on the same network A new specification, called ARCnet Plus, will support data rates of 20 Mbps
2 500M Attached Resource Computer Network By: Datapoint
Attached Resource Computer Network A relatively low speed form of LAN data link technology (2 5 Mbps) developed by Datapoint, in which all systems are attached to a common coaxial cable ARCnet uses a token-bus form of medium access control in which a system transmits only when it has the token
A popular local area network that uses token passing passing over a star topology of coaxial cable, twisted pair, or optical fiber
Attached Resources Computer network Developed by Datapoint in the late 70's to provide data transfers at 2 5 Mbps Very inexpensive products with great product interoperability
Attached Resource Computer Network - ARCnet is no longer used Increasingly, Ethernet network architecture is becoming the dominant one used A 2 5-Mbps token-bus LAN developed in the late 1970s and early 1980s by Datapoint Corporation
Attached Resource Computer Network A 2 5-100Mbps token bus LAN developed by Datapoint Corp It is simple, easy to use and inexpensive
- A 2 5-Mbps LAN technology created by DataPoint Corporation in the early 1980s ARCnet uses token-based networking technology and runs over several kinds of coaxial cable, and twisted-pair and fiber-optic cable
Attached Resource Computer Network A 2 5-Mbps token-bus LAN developed in the late 1970s and early 1980s by Datapoint Corporation
Attached Resource Computer Network 2 5-Mbps token-bus LAN developed in the late 1970s and early 1980s by Datapoint Corporation
A popular local area network that uses token passing over a star topology of coaxial cable, twisted pair, or optical fiber
A proprietary token-bus networking architecture developed by Datapoint Corporation in the mid-1970s Currently, ARCnet is widely licensed by third-party vendors and was a popular networking architecture, especially in smaller installations It has a bandwidth of 2 5 Mbit/s, is reliable, and supports coaxial, twisted pair and fiber optic cable-based implementations
Developed by Datapoint Corporation in 1977, designed as a baseband, token-passing, bus architecture, transmitting at 2 5 Mbps A successor to the original ArcNet, ArcNetplus supports data transmission rates of 20 Mbps A simple, inexpensive, flexible network architecture designed for workgroup-sized LANs, ArcNet runs on coaxial, twisted-pair, and fiber-optic cable and supports up to 255 nodes ArcNet technology predates IEEE Project 802 standards but loosely maps to the 802 4 document See also Project 802
Attached Resource Computer Network, developed by Datapoint, was one of the first and most popular LAN Transmits at 2 5Mbps using variation of Token Rings passing protocols
A LAN from Datapoint Corporation that interconnects personal computers via coaxial, twisted-pair, or fiberoptic cable It transmits at 2 megabits per second and uses a token-passing access method and distributed-star topology
Developed by Datapoint Corporation in 1977, designed as a baseband, token-passing, bus architecture, transmitting at 2 5 Mbps A successor to the original ArcNet, ArcNetplus supports data transmission rates of 20 Mbps A simple, inexpensive, flexible network architecture designed for workgroup-sized LANs, ArcNet runs on coaxial, twisted-pair, and fiber-optic cable and supports up to 255 nodes ArcNet technology predates IEEE Project 802 standards but loosely maps to the 802 4 document See also Project 802
(Attached Resource Computer Network) A 2 5 Mbps LAN developed by Datapoint One of the first and one of the most popular LANs
LAN implementation based on Datapoint's attached resource computer network
arcnet
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