802.11g is a wireless standard, and not a cable. However the max speed at which 802.11g can operate at is 54mbit/s.
100 m
The max distance is 100 m.
The transmission speed of the cable is limited in most cases by the hardware attached to it. Cat5 basic cable has been used successfully up to 1 gigabit speed using ethernet. There have been lab tests proving it might be useful for 10gigabit over short ranges but usually that requires Cat5e or Cat6 grade cable. The most common speeds are 10/100 mb ethernet.
100 meters. Which is 324 feet.
The maximum speed Ethernet of mm fiber has a transmission speed of 100 Mbit/s. The Ethernet mm fiber increases the speed from 10 to 100 megabits per second.
Been answered already. 10 megabits/sec.
100.9 mb.s
Coax cable is OK for R.F. up to several gigahertz, over medium to short runs. For data, we went to twisted-pair with 100 megabit Ethernet, and twisted-pair is now used in 10 gigabit Ethernet. So... using Nyquist, you can probably use coax cable up to gigabit speeds over medium-short distances, but I'm not aware of anyone doing it. Maybe try a google search.
Using UTP or STP cable, 100 meters per segment.
Been answered already. 10 megabits/sec.
The max speed is 100mb on Cat3 cable. We have it here and have hooked a fluke up to it as well as plugged a laptop directly in switch at a gig speed.
Dont ask me cuz i dont know im just realy stupid