You might have poor connectivity. The wire could be marred in some way.
Based on the VLAN tag.
Gigabit Ethernet is the term used to describe the transmission of Ethernet frames at a rate of one gigabit per second. It started being used in early 1999.
Data transmissions is via frames, each having a single MAC address. The CSMA/CD access method is used to detect collisions.
destination (physical/hardware address) Source (physical/hardware address) Start flag (start of message indicator) Recipient sender encapsulated data end of frame
yes i think, because the MAC address is the physical address which is assigned by the vendor of the Ethernet card. ** Improved Answer ** No, Unmanaged switches do not have a MAC address. All they do is filter, forward or flood frames.
They can support multiple higher-layer protocols, and Ethernet 802.3 frames cannot.
a. because they can support multiple higher-layer protocols, and Ethernet_802.3 frames cannot
because they can support multiple higher-layer protocols
Usually Ethernet frames.
It would be 46 and 64 bytes.
The Point-to-Point Protocol over Ethernet or the PPPOE is a network protocol for encapsulating PPP frames inside Ethernet frames. The PPPOE term is something used confusingly to refer to either a modem to router protocol and/or the DSL side of things.
Based on the VLAN tag.
Gigabit Ethernet is the term used to describe the transmission of Ethernet frames at a rate of one gigabit per second. It started being used in early 1999.
LANE
A MAC address is unique to your ethernet card. MAC addresses are used within an Ethernet network to uniquely identify the source and destination of Ethernet frames. ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) is used on IP networks to map IP addresses to MAC addresses within an Ethernet network.
1.All frames are transmitted on all Ethernet segments 2. shared medium networks use CSMA/CD to access the medium
10 Gigabit Ethernet can transmit Ethernet frames at a speed to 10 gigabits per second (10 billion bits per second). The technology has been slowly growing in popularity, having been hindered by its higher price.