beautypg.com

About fast ethernet – Linksys DSSXFXST User Manual

Page 5

background image

About Fast Ethernet

As the demand for desktop video, multimedia development, imaging, and

other speed-intensive applications continues to rise, the need for high per-

formance, fault tolerant LAN technology will become more critical.

Standard Ethernet, which has been the most popular networking technolo-

gy to date with a maximum data throughput of 10 Mbps, is becoming

insufficient to handle the latest video, multimedia, and other speed-inten-

sive client/server LAN applications.

Among the proposed solutions to the dilemma of network speed, Fast

Ethernet has emerged as the most viable and economical. Capable of send-

ing and receiving data at 100 Mbps (megabits per second), it is more than

fast enough to handle even the most demanding video and other real-time

applications.

Although there are a number of different competing Fast Ethernet imple-

mentations, 100BaseTX is by far the most popular. Operating on two pairs

of Category 5 unshielded twisted-pair (UTP) cabling, 100BaseTX supports

high speed signaling and is relatively inexpensive. Because it uses four

wires for data transmission and the same packet format, packet length,

error control, and management information as 10BaseT, 100BaseTX can

be made to communicate with older 10BaseT equipment when routed

through a switch.

This scalability is one of 100BaseTX's major advantages over other forms

of Fast Ethernet: it allows critical, speed-dependent network segments to

be upgraded to 100BaseTX speeds as needed without rewiring, refitting,

and retraining an entire site. Heterogeneous networks can now mix both

slow and fast network segments for different users or for different depart-

ments. Publishing, R&D, video, multimedia, or accounting departments

can enjoy a 100Mbps pace, while other corporate segments can operate at

slower and more economic 10Mbps speeds.

A network without a switch is often called a shared-bandwidth network

because the net's overall bandwidth is shared among all of the nodes –

each PC, file server, or other node gets a piece of the bandwidth. In a

shared network, data packets are sent to all available nodes until they fall

upon their destination. Much of the bandwidth, consequently, is wasted

because some packets have to spend time "looking" for their destinations.

3

This manual is related to the following products: