Histograms are typically not used for anything other than looking at patterns of network traffic; it has little or nothing to do with topology or peer to peer systems as is.
Yes, any data set can be displayed using a histogram, as long as it represents original data, or data that does fall in a particular order.
Yes.
You draw a series of line segments joining the points which would be the middle of the top of each bar of the histogram.
A histogram can handle data when the bars are not all of the same width. This is particularly important for data which are skewed.
It makes Data simpler to compare as opposed to a chart
in bus topology computers are connected with each other by a wire in a approximately strait manner..and if one computer stops working the whole network will stop. while in star topology every computer is connected with the host computer & much wire is require..and if any client computer tops working it will not effect the whole network.----ravi singh chauhan...7275974787
The best topology is ring topology. Star is the next best after ringr, and then bus, which is pretty old, but not too expensive. Full mesh topology is theoretically the best since every device is connected to every other device, thus maximizing speed and security. These, however, are quite expensive to install. The next best would be tree topology, which is basically a connection of stars.
The advantage is in fault detection; in a bus topology any break in any wire segment would cause the entire LAN to fail. With a star topology, a break in any wire segment only affects the one client connected to the network.
by using your brain
Yes, any data set can be displayed using a histogram, as long as it represents original data, or data that does fall in a particular order.
Yes.
You draw a series of line segments joining the points which would be the middle of the top of each bar of the histogram.
A histogram can handle data when the bars are not all of the same width. This is particularly important for data which are skewed.
Star Topology
it depends on the circumstances, if there is a server in the room and a switch/router then they will be using the mesh star but if not and all the computers have 2 Ethernet ports on the back of them then they are more than likely to be using the Ring topology. But these days they are normally connected to switch ----> Then a Router -----> then a Server which is connected to the internet and has a very strong and secure firewall. ^^^^ IGNORE ! Local area network. :)
it is good :) try using google.
the ring topology is a network within which all computer are connected like in a circle. The ring topology data transmission is depending on a token. it's a programme given to a computer to allow it to communicate with others computers. it's useful but if one computer goes down, the topology is down too.