in the star topology central system switch or hub act as a central devices and if it fails whole the system will fail, in star topology if one station only transmit at a time other wise the collision will occur and it will broadcast the data like a bus.so it contains the properties like bus that's why said that it is logically a bus
Components of network device configurations How end systems are logically connected to a network How end systems are physically connected to a network
Components of network device configurations, How end systems are logically connected to a network, How end systems are physically connected to a network.
A network tree is used to show the arrangement of various elements of a computer network. It may be depicted physically or logically and is the topological structure of the network.
Physically: You look at it and make sure its connected Logically( through your computer): you go to command prompt and type in "ipconfig/all" and look at the network interface part or you go to: Control Panel Network View Devices Right Click the NIC and go to properties
Yes
Any network that uses a switch or router, but not a hub, to centrally and physically connect the nodes on the network. It is a physical star, but logically, the nodes communicate as a bus, e.g., each node communicates only with the switch to which it is connected; it is up to the switch to pass the information along another bus connection to another node. A hub, on the other hand, is both physically and logically a star, because all nodes connect to the central bus and the communication path is radiated from one node via the hub to all other nodes. Star-wired bus should not be confused with a star-bus hybrid, which is a network made up of multiple stars, each one connected to the next via a bus.
A logical topology shows how a network is configured logically rather than physically. The main difference is that you could have 10 routers, 25 switches, and 5,000 computers in a logical topology and it doesn't matter where they are on the screen, it matters how they are connected to one another.
A remote terminal is a computer connected to a network, but is not physically in the same building as the rest of the computers on the network. For example, it might be a computer at the home of a business employee, connected over a secure link to their place of work.
I guess you are talking about a network switch. You would need a NIC, Network Interface Card, and a cable.
If the server is publicly accessible, type in its domain name from any computer connected to the internet. If it is local to the organization, you must be physically or virtually connected to the network. This means you must be on the corporate network, or have a VPN connection into the corporate network.
It depends what you consider a network. If all the cables and associated hardware is there, but no computers are connected to it, it could still be considered a network. Others would just think of it as a collection of cables and switches unless there are at least two computers on it.
It depends what you consider a network. If all the cables and associated hardware is there, but no computers are connected to it, it could still be considered a network. Others would just think of it as a collection of cables and switches unless there are at least two computers on it.