Yes
The use of one or more servers distinguishes a client/server network from a peer-to-peer network.
DNS Servers
DNS servers
A client/server network means:Bigger, more expensive equipmentMore complex software on the servers (more costly as well)A trained network engineer to run and troubleshoot it
Pretty much a client server network is known as a client server network.
A server waits for a request by a client. When the client sends the requests, the server answers to it. Examples are file servers, that listen to requests from clients wanting to save or retrieve files; print servers that wait for requests to print (and then print them); DHCP servers that wait for requests to provide IP addresses; etc.
A server will receive connections from a client, and the client will usually receive some service from the server. When you're browsing web sites online, those web sites are hosted on servers. Your web browser acts as a client to connect to the server and interact with it.
Simple: in order to have a client-server architecture you need a network. The role of the network is to move data packets between the client and the server. In a client-server architecture the server usually has to manage the network (for example, a domain controller in a Windows environment).
No; users communicate over a group of centralized servers, so this is a client-server system.No; users communicate over a group of centralized servers, so this is a client-server system.No; users communicate over a group of centralized servers, so this is a client-server system.No; users communicate over a group of centralized servers, so this is a client-server system.
For the internet; your web browser is the client and the web server is the server.
I don't believe that is a true statement. Client server networks provide a function of security and data resource sharing. An intranet is just a private, internal network primarily used by employees of a company, or a network that keeps its information internally. Even in an intranet you still have a client server relationship within the network.
The computer on a network that requests resources from the server is called the client. The server may also be used to implement administrative security for the client computers.